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EDITH
STEIN
Finite and Eternal Being
Edited by Dr. L. Gelber and Romaeus Leuven, O.C.D.
Translated by Kurt F. Reinhardt.
This volume bears the imprint of the extraordinary intellectual and
spiritual journey of its author, one of the most remarkable women of
the twentieth century. Born in Breslau into a practicing Jewish
family in 1891, Edith Stein abandoned her faith as a teenager. In
1921, however, she underwent a profound conversion and the following
year she was baptized into the Catholic church. As a prominent
German Catholic lay-woman she continued her teaching, writing and
promotion of women's rights and began directing her attention toward
a deeper encounter between the phenomenology she had helped to
develop and the modern scholastic tradition of the church she had
embraced. In 1933 she left the academic milieu and entered the
Carmel of Cologne. Yet, she soon took up her intellectual labors
again to produce the present text, which remained unpublished at the
time of her death in 1942 at the hands of the Nazis. Finite and
Eternal Being is Edith Stein's master work, the culmination of
her lifelong search for truth in all its philosophical,
psychological, and spiritual dimensions.
ISBN
0-935216-32-4
ICS Publications Code: FEB
664 pages, paper, $19.95
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Starting from the most basic principles, the author takes us on
a journey through a vast range of classic philosophical themes, such
as potency and act, substance and accident, matter and form, time
and eternity, in creative dialogue with the great thinkers of the
past (e.g., Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas. Scotus) and of
modern times (e.g., Kant, Husserl, Heidegger, Przywara, Conrad-Martius).
With her careful step-by-step analysis, she gradually shows how the
being of all finite existents (especially the human "I") finds its
ultimate ground and destiny in the eternal Divine Being, the Creator
whose trinitarian nature is reflected throughout creation.
Reviews
". . .a demanding journey for the reader, presuming familiarity
with the scope of Western philosophy. But. . .richly rewarding and
well worth the effort to persevere."
Arlice Davenport
in The Wichita Eagle
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