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gesang

gesang@book.itinerariummentis.org

Joined 6 months, 1 week ago

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gesang's books

Currently Reading (View all 43)

David Graeber, David Wengrow: The Dawn of Everything (French language, 2021, Farrar, Straus and Giroux) 1 star

A trailblazing account of human history, challenging our most fundamental assumptions about social evolution--from the …

Another propaganda

1 star

There are several flaws in this book. We already know this. The theory Graeber and Wengrow put forward has been in vogue for nearly half a century. It's not new and it even is cliched. No one really thinks the analytic constructs of the theories of the State correspond to actual historical truth, not even the original theorizers thought like that. Its influence is another thing. Speaking of influence, the authors again try to conjure up a false categorical connection between how a certain concept emerged, and whether this concept is really in the object that those made heavy use of it. This, coupled with a complete overlooking of medieval history and scholastic developments in the field of jurisprudence, led them to devise a totalizing narrative that while reducing the principle underlying the status quo to contingency, and simultaneously totalize the so-called freedom of the native Americans (ironically just like …

John Milbank: The Suspended Middle (Paperback, 2005, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company) 3 stars

French Jesuit Henri de Lubac (1896-1991) was arguably the most revolutionary theologian of the twentieth …

Insightful, but fundamentally flawed

3 stars

Milbank's position seems to me an absurd mixture of insightful, sane observation and bizarre and unintelligible hostility toward a tradition that he calls "Scotist". This largely is due to his inability to engage with serious, or even technical, philosophy as a theologian with a cultural bias. When he invokes phrases like "participatory" and "analogia entis" and stresses their essential character, it is never intelligible since these catchwords are merely invoked rather than used in any precise manner: there's no inherent connection that assures only by means of participation can the natural yearning for the supernatural be made possible, and analogia entis has literally nothing to do with the problems under investigation.

And seriously I can't take these theologians who find a fault in the 13th century and condemn a whole 800 years of civilization as fundamentally went astray seriously. Not because I'm a progressive, but solely because historicity cannot be …