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St. Augustine's Press |
A
positive engagement of the complementary dimensions of intellect that St.
Thomas calls the intellectus (intuitive) and the ratio (rational), Making
enlarges the concept of making as that capacity to our nature as persons
whereby we exercise stewardship in the world, whether in the making of a
garden or of a poem. Demanding and provocative, Making examines significant
levels of disorientation of intellect in the modern world. Montgomerys critique, in the form of essays speculative, reflective, argumentative, seeks to point the way out of intellectual disarray and confusion by affirming the spiritual nature of man, of mind, of the noetic quality of man as maker in the course of his intellectual journey. What transpires during this journey, he believes, has deep and permanent impact on ones view of oneself, of others, of life, and of thought. Above all, he shows, through his sensitive and assiduous commentary, how it is possible to recover from our modernist divisions and separations. Foremost among these is the extreme intellectual and spiritual deracination that grips modern life when intellect is increasingly distanced from any transcendent reality other than itself. |
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| Making:
The Proper Habit of Our Being 344 pages, 6 x 9, clothbound, foreword, preface, notes ISBN: 1-890318-39-6, 2000 $37.50 (£26.00) |