By Edith Stein, translated by Walter Redmond. Five
contributions on the title themes, including two of Stein's most
famous essays: a comparison of Husserl and Aquinas, and an
examination of the "Ways to Know God" according to Pseudo-Dionysius.
ICS Code: KF
176 pages, paper, $15.95.
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The articles and notes in this new anthology come from the
final twelve years of Edith Stein's life, and reveal her efforts to
integrate the Christian faith she had embraced at the time of her
baptism with her rigorous training as a phenomenologist. Included
here for the first time are both versions of her famous comparison
between the thought-systems of Edmund Husserl (her philosophical
mentor) and Thomas Aquinas (representing the Catholic tradition),
written first in dialogue form and then reworked as an essay in
Husserl's honor. The final entry, "Ways to Know God," a study of the
famed fifth or sixth century author who wrote under the name of
Dionysius the Areopagite, was originally published in The Thomist
and intended for an American audience. One of the last works that
Edith Stein completed before her arrest and deportation to
Auschwitz, it is presented here in a fresh new translation,
amplified with previously deleted sections that deal with such
important topics as atheism and the nature of symbols.
In his recent encyclical, Fides et Ratio, Pope John Paul
II recommends attention to Edith Stein as one of the great modern
figures who "offer significant examples of a process of
philosophical enquiry which was enriched by engaging the data of
faith" (para. 74). This book provides readers interested in Edith
Stein with an accessible introduction to major themes in her later
thought.
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