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Beyond Secular Order is the first of a two-volume work that expands upon renowned theologian John Milbank’s innovative attempt to understand both theology and modern thought begun in his previously published classic text Theology and Social Theory.
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Seitenzahl: 642
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface: The Hidden Dimension of Humanity
Sequence on Modern Ontology
1 From Theology to Philosophy
2 The Four Pillars of Modern Philosophy
3 Modern Philosophy: A Theological Critique
4 Analogy versus Univocity
5 Identity versus Representation
6 Intentionality and Embodiment
7 Intentionality and Selfhood
8 Reason and the Incarnation of the Logos
9 The Passivity of Modern Reason
10 The Baroque Simulation of Cosmic Order
11 Deconstructed Representation and Beyond
12 Passivity and Concursus
13 Representation in Philosophy
14 Actualism versus Possibilism
15 Influence versus Concurrence
16 Transition
Sequence on Political Ontology
1 Cosmos, Law and Morality
2 Metaphysics and Modern Politics
3 The Fate of the Rational Animal
4 The Irony of Representation
5 On Legal Concurrence
6 The Fate of the Social Animal
7 Representation and Mixed Government
8 Bureaucracy and the Formal Distinction
9 Form, Matter and Contract
10 The Antiquity of Historicism
11 The Sovereignty of the Artist
12 Eucharistic Creativity and Political Power
13 The Conundrum of Kingship
14 The Truth of Political Fiction
15 The Two Rival Constructions
16 Creativity and Mixed Government
17 Christological Constitutionalism
18 The Fate of the Fabricating Animal
19 The Fate of the Beast-Angel
20 The Death of Charity
21 Augustine’s Three Cities
22 Church as Cosmopolis
23 Aquinas and Kingship
24 The Theology of Ruling
25 The Ecumenico-Political Problem
26 Supernatural Charity and Global Order
27 Socialism Beyond the Left
28 Critique of All Materialisms
Index
‘Exploratory, daring, irritating and illuminating by turns, John Milbank cannot be compared with anything else in the intellectual life of our times. Whatever our conclusions on the positions he has defended, he has succeeded in posing the questions that have really mattered, so that those who have simply wished not to know, have risked being all too obviously granted their wish. Now in a work of synthesis he revisits his early modernity-criticism, enriching it with the reflections on ontology, politics and theology that have occupied him since. It will become the cardinal text for interpreting him and arguing with him.’
Oliver O’Donovan, University of Edinburgh
‘This rich and many-sided work documents the remoter origins of modern Western philosophy in the theological controversies of the later Middle Ages, arising out of the nominalist rebellion against Aquinas’ synthesis. But tracing this connection has much more than an antiquarian interest. Milbank goes on to show how we can understand the strains and tensions within modern philosophy, and the contemporary attempts at critique, in new and fruitful ways in the light of this history. And he extends these insights to our contemporary understanding of politics. New and exciting avenues of exploration open again and again in this richly suggestive work.’
Charles Taylor, McGill University
Series editors: Catherine Pickstock, John Milbank, and Graham WardReligion has a growing visibility in the world at large. Throughout the humanities there is a mounting realization that religion and culture lie so closely together that religion is an unavoidable and fundamental human reality. Consequently, the examination of religion and theology now stands at the centre of any questioning of our western identity, including the question of whether there is such a thing as ‘truth’.Illuminations aims both to reflect the diverse elements of these developments and, from them, to produce creative new syntheses. It is unique in exploring the new interaction between theology, philosophy, religious studies, political theory, and cultural studies. Despite the theoretical convergence of certain trends they often in practice do not come together. The aim of Illuminations is to make this happen, and advance contemporary theoretical discussion.
Sacrifice and Community: Jewish Offering and Christian EucharistMatthew LeveringThe Other Calling: Theology, Intellectual Vocation, and TruthAndrew ShanksThe State of the University: Academic Knowledges and the Knowledge of GodStanley HauerwasThe End of Work: Theological Critiques of CapitalismJohn HughesGod and the BetweenWilliam DesmondAfter Enlightenment: The Post-Secular Vision of J.G. HamannJohn R. BetzThe Theology of Food: Eating and the EucharistAngel F. Mendez MontoyaNo God, No Science: Theology, Cosmology, BiologyMichael Hanby
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Cover image: Inside the Ca’ d’Oro, Venice. Photo © John Milbank. Cover design by www.cyandesign.co.uk
In memory of my uncles and auntsDAVID AND HAMISH MACLAGAN, MARGARET WOOD AND RUTH MILBANK
In the groves of their academy, at the end of every visto, you see nothing but the gallows.
Edmund Burke, from Reflections on the Revolution in France
I am indebted to Conor Cunningham and Aaron Riches for the initial suggestion for this book – though in the end it has turned out very differently – and to my head of department, Simon Oliver, for his support while finishing it. Also to Sam Kimbriel for his comments on the project during this period. My other intellectual debts are now too numerous and deep to be readily recorded, but my thinking here has been profoundly informed by continual conversation with my wife Alison and my children Arabella and Sebastian. Also by frequent interchanges with my former student Catherine Pickstock of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and with her former student Adrian Pabst, now of the University of Kent. Finally, my great thanks go to Rebecca Harkin and Karen Raith at Wiley Blackwell for enabling this book quickly to appear in print, to Janet Moth, project manager, and to Eric Lee for compiling the index.
J.M.
This book is a successor volume to Theology and Social Theory, and seeks to deepen its analyses.1
Like that book, it is in part an exercise in tracing the roots of ‘the secular’. The first ‘sequence’ of the current book does so in terms of philosophy. A proposed sequel, On Divine Government, will further do so in terms of theology and the history of religion. The reason for this triple division we shall shortly see.
There is an intrinsic difficulty in any such genealogical endeavour. Human existence is split between actions and verbal or other symbolic performances on the one hand, and reflexive verbal theorisations (in whatever degree of abstraction) on the other. Apparently, we usually act without reflection and without reference to our theoretical assumptions. Equally, we often present our theoretical musings as if these arose from a void and were not intended as pragmatic interventions. Yet in reality all our actions assume a mythical, metaphoric, or rational framework, while all our theoretical utterances and writings are practical interventions in human history, whether deliberately so or not.
This means that both acting and thinking typically occur in the shadows, always with half-concealment. As a result, human history but rarely comes to the light of day and we remain unable clearly to see ourselves. The task of the genealogist is therefore to penetrate these shadows, and to reach a level where we can regard actions in the light of their presuppositions and theories in the light of their practical tendencies.
Yet precisely because this dimension of full daylight is hidden, to try to reach it can appear to be a further venture into the murk, a departure from the apparently clear evidence of events on the one hand, and the exegetical perusal of texts on the other. For the problem is that presuppositions have generally gone unsaid in actions, while practical contexts and implications have been obfuscated on the page. It follows that both mere empiricism and mere philology are self-defeating: in seeking to reach the objective, they fail to reach the real.
By contrast, the assumption of my genealogy is that there can be perspectives from which one can see the homology between human theory and human action. Yet this truly illuminating light is hidden under a divided bushel, and can be glimpsed but fleetingly, because what history most disguises through division into thought and event is the deepest substance of its own occurring. Hence, in the name of truth, one must run the risk that any claim to illuminate human history at depth will present conclusions that can seem excessively abstruse or even implausible. Yet it may be this very abstruseness that is the mark of their authenticity.
Such a circumstance is not a licence for guesswork, even if it reveals the unavoidable need for interpretative ‘abduction’ that necessarily goes (one hopes with caution and good judgement) ‘beyond the evidence’. Of course as much evidence as can be gleaned should be gleaned, yet the most relevant evidence here is the witness of elusive echo back and forth between the two registers of verba and pragmata.
Given my argued position therefore, it is not simply a matter of seeing whether or not these echoes can be traced. Rather, it is taken to be the case, for reasons of historical ontology, that a deep homology must exist, since specifically human action is theoretically informed and all human words have a performative dimension. Also, given the fact that human beings can communicate with each other in greater or lesser degrees, one must apply this principle at a more collective level: there will always be a shared hidden horizon of coincidence between act and meaning, whether at the level of a locality, a culture, or the entire human race – which undoubtedly shares, at some level, a single culture.
In consequence, the presupposition of this book is that there has to exist a concealed symmetry between the most rarefied expressions of modern thought in ‘philosophy’, on the one hand, and modernity’s collective ‘political’ deeds on the other. A further presupposition is that it is possible to take a short cut to locating this isomorphism by looking at specifically ‘political philosophy’ or ‘political theory’ in the broadest sense (as much of it is the work of jurists and not of philosophers). For it is likely that within this discourse metaphysical abstraction and lived events will theoretically come together in a markedly acute fashion
It should be noted that this is a different proposal from that of reading the history of political thought ‘contextually’, though that is involved and by no means disparaged. Instead, it is rather that political thought is taken to be a level of writing that begins to disclose a concealed, more ultimate ‘context’ that is itself theoretical as much as practical.
The focus of the present book is therefore on a certain homology between metaphysical philosophy, on the one hand, and political philosophy on the other. Within the scope of theory at least, it is intended to show how ideas about being coincide with ideas about human action. What is ‘seen’ corresponds to what is done or made, in accordance with the Aristotelian understanding that, while an ergon proceeds from an essence, an essence is something that always performs an , such that a blinded eye is for Aristotle no longer an eye at all.
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