Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience

Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience

by David W. Rodick
Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience

Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience

by David W. Rodick

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Overview

Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy: The Religious Dimension of Experience examines the philosophy of Gabriel Marcel and its relationship to key figures in classical American Philosophy, in particular Josiah Royce, William Ernest Hocking, and Henry Bugbee. Few scholars have taken sufficient note of the fact that Gabriel Marcel’s thought is vitally informed by classical American philosophy.

Marcel’s essays on Royce offer a window into the soul of Marcel’s recent philosophical development. The idealism of early Marcel stemmed from an omnipresent sense of a “broken world”—an experience of rent or tear within the tissue of experience similar to what John Dewey referred to as an “inward laceration of the spirit.” Furthermore, Marcel’s intuition concerning the primacy of intersubjective experience can help us understand W. E. Hocking’s thought. Finally, Marcel’s notion of ľ exigence ontologique clarifies his relationship to Henry Bugbee. Marcel and Bugbee explore the contour of experience—the indigenous circuit of associations pertaining to the self as coesse. Through a reflexive act Marcel refers to as “ingatherdness,” the self undergoes increasing degrees of unification by experiencing “an act of faith made explicit only in a dialectical act of participation.”

David W. Rodick shows that Marcel’s relationship to these American philosophers is not coincidental, but rather the philosophical expression of his Christian faith. Marcel’s most important legacy is his commitment to unity of Christian philosophizing, a unity derived from both reason and revelation. Its diversity stems from the objective plurality of what is pursued as well as the subjective plurality of those who pursue it. Christian philosophizing seeks a truth that every Christian believes can never be untrue to itself.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498510448
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 04/12/2017
Series: American Philosophy Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

David W. Rodick is associate professor at Xavier University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Chapter One: Gabriel Marcel and American Philosophy
Chapter Two: Radical Empiricism, Intersubjectivity, and the Importance of Praxis in the Philosophy of Gabriel Marcel
Chapter Three: Idealism Through a Past Darkly: La métaphysic de Royce
Chapter Four: Gabriel Marcel and the Issue of “Transitional Importance” in the Philosophy of Josiah Royce
Chapter Five: Gabriel Marcel and William Ernest Hocking: “Companions of Eternity”—Experience, Intersubjectivity, and Realization of the Sacred
Chapter Six: Finding One’s Own Voice: The Philosophical Development of Henry G. Bugbee, Jr.
Chapter Seven: Gabriel Marcel and the Religious Dimension of Experience
Bibliography
Appendix: Letter from John E. Smith
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