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The Sound of the Analogia Ends Part I
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
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Urs von Balthasar’s theology is attuned to a realism which becomes more attractive as Rahner’s engagement with Kantianism seems less pertinent. This realism ‘turns the rudder hard over’, as von Balthasar said of Barth; but how did he acquire it? Rowan Williams has suggested that von Balthasar’s seamanship originates partly with Heidegger. This article will place him within the German Catholic revival of the 1920s and 1930s. At this time, German Catholics delved into phenomenology, and into Newman’s theology. They appraised Aquinas’s thought differently than did English or French neo-Thomists.
The Memoirs of the Hungarian philosopher Aurel Kolnai (1900-1973) supply some sidelights on von Balthasar’s writings. Both men attended the University of Vienna between 1922 and 1926. There von Balthasar is said to have “. . . heard the Plotinus lectures of Hans Eibl: there being was . . . interpreted as . . . the self-communicating good.” He will later say that the affinity between Thomas and Heidegger derives not from Aristotle, but from “. . . that Plotinus for whom being remains a supraconceptual mystery.. ,” Kolnai places Eibl in his time and place:
“. .. Hans Eibl, [was] a Sudeten German and violent nationalist, yet a Catholic with ... a prodigious erudition concerning St. Augustine and Patristic thought . . . During the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime, Eibl was editor of a crypto-Nazi rag ... Yet this man, essentially a ... rightminded Catholic Conservative, had little resemblance to the Nazi and none to the current... ‘Reich German’ ... type.”
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- Copyright © 1993 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
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24 . Dr. Dunlop explains the disparity in dates: The book was first published in 1913; Kolnai refers to Scheler's re‐edition of The Nature of Sympathy, in the early twenties. Sheler now added the speculations about ‘cosmic Einsfühlung’ which are discussed below. Scheler's allegiance to Christianity was not deepened.
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30 Ibid, pp. 182–4.
31 Ibid, pp. 183–4.
32 Ibid, pp. 184–5.
33 Husserl, Logical Investigations, Vol, I, pp. 60, 70–71, and on Bolzano, pp. 222–4. Setting the empirical singular against the universal: Ibid, pp. 101–110, 185 and 227–8.
34 Max Scheler “Problems of Religion”, in On the Eternal in Man, [1921], translated by Bernard Noble (S.C.M. Press, London, 1960), pp. 105–356 (pp. 170–1; 247–51; 254 and 282–83).
35 Ibid, pp. 149–50.
36 Ibid, p. 163 and 283.
37 Ibid, p. 284.
38 Aertsen, Nature and Creature, pp. 222–4.
39 Przywara, Erich, Analogia Entis, translated by Secretan, Philibert (Presses Universitaires de France, Paris, 1990), pp. 65Google Scholar (philosophy and theology); on analogy as measure, pp. 125–27.
40 Ibid, p. 27–30.
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44 Thomas Aquinas, Concerning Being and Essence, Ch. 2, pp. 7–8 and Ch. 5, pp. 28–9; Summa Contra Gentiles, Bk II, Chapter 54, points 6, 8 and 10. The structure is, more precisely, threefold, including individual, essence and being: Ibid, Ch. 3, pp. 15–18 and Aertsen, Nature and Creature, p. 138.
45 Przywara, Analogia, p. 94.
46 Ibid, pp. 75 and 156–8.
47 Ibid, p. 32.
48 Ibid, pp. 31 and 163.
49 Ibid, pp. 87 and 114–15; Schrijver, Merveilleux Accord, p. 284; von Balthasar, , La Dramatique Divine: II. Les Personnes du. drama: 2. les Personnes dans le Christ, translated by Givord, Robert (Lethielleux, Paris, 1988), p. 176Google Scholar.
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51 Przywara, Analogia, pp. 116.
52 Ibid, p. 106.
53 Ibid, pp. 144 and 163.
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