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by David P. Fleischacker/Dunstan Robidoux OSB
Classical culture
cannot be jettisoned without being replaced; and what replaces it cannot
but run counter to classical expectations. There is bound to be formed
a solid right that is determined to live in a world that no longer exists.
There is bound to be formed a scattered left, captivated by now this, now
that new development, exploring now this and now that new possibility.
But what will count is a perhaps not numerous center, big enough to be
at home in both the old and the new, painstaking enough to work out one
by one the transitions to be made, strong enough to refuse half measures
and insist on complete solutions even though it has to wait.
. . . Bernard
Lonergan, "Dimensions of Meaning"(1)
Introduction
The Lonergan Institute for
the "Good Under Construction" is an independent organization, located at
St. Anselm's Abbey in Washington, D.C. For the sake of coherency, the following
issues will be mentioned and discussed: (1) the events which, over a period
of five years, led to the establishment of the Lonergan Institute for the
"Good Under Construction" as a new kind of training institute for persons
seeking more explanatory understandings of the relations connecting faith
and reason (religion and culture, or grace and freedom); (2) the special
and peculiar mission of St. Anselm's Abbey as a religious community of
Benedictine monks which was initially founded by the English Benedictine
Congregation through the agency of Fort Augustus Abbey (located in Inverness-shire,
Scotland); (3) the purposes and tasks which this new Institute will address
in its operations; and (4) its future and present status as an already
functioning organization with a tentative schedule of studies and financial
plan. In the midst, a biographical note on the life and the contribution
of Fr. Bernard Lonergan S.J., as a philosopher and theologian, explains
the seminal influence of his intellectual initiative and why the development
of his thought merits attention today.
Prehistory: the Lonergan
Project
In April 1993, instigated
by David Fleischacker, a group of students and faculty at the Catholic
University of America met to discuss the formation of a reading group that
would discuss Bernard Lonergan's book Insight: A Study of Human Understanding.
The group began meeting in the fall of 1993. Insight first appeared in
1957, and is considered one of Lonergan's greatest achievements: "one of
the most brilliant books of the twentieth century. . .[and] one of the
most difficult."(2) For many, it is "virtually
incomprehensible."(3) Its first five chapters
were written, at most, for only 5% of the reading public: those who can
easily jump into mathematics and science "with facility and comfort."(4)
Through almost 800 pages, Insight studies the nature of cognition within
science and common sense, and then applies its findings to questions of
epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, knowledge of God, and the problem of
evil.(5)
The magnitude and difficulty
of the material present pedagogical problems for many readers such that
few readers can profitably read and understand its contents if forced to
work on their own.(6) If reading Heidegger
rates as very hard, Lonergan is "very, very, very hard."(7)
For instance, in the first chapter, Lonergan employs two examples from
physics (Newton and Einstein on the unintelligibility of constant velocity),
and two examples from mathematics (the square root of two and non-countable
multitudes) to explain the nature of inverse insight. Understanding these
examples usually requires a familiarity with physics and mathematics that
few readers know how to attain.(8)
The formation of a reading
group was, thus, the solution to these difficult pedagogical problems.
Participants help each other out, although, for best results, a teacher
is needed who understands the work and who can guide others in reading
and reflecting on the contents of Lonergan's Insight.
The first founding group
has continued to operate since September 1993 with a second reading group
formed in September 1994 which began to meet at St. Anselm's Abbey at the
suggestion of Br. Dunstan Robidoux OSB. Participants included graduate
students from Catholic University and other interested individuals who
had learned about the work from sources beyond Catholic University. One
important source is the Continuing Education School of Georgetown University
where adult education courses have been taught by some of the members of
the first group.
In November 1995, the members
of the second reading group (David Fleischacker, Dr. John and Pasqualina
Young, Dr. Ron Vardiman, and Br. Dunstan Robidoux) decided to jointly host
a regularly scheduled radio program that would deal with current issues
and problems in Catholic theology. With the agreement of Nicholas Heidenberg
of Real Presence Communications (which is working to establish a Catholic
radio and TV station in the greater Washington area), a program designed
for television is presently being considered. Beginning in 1993 at Georgetown,
Br. Dunstan Robidoux offered a series of six and then eight lectures on
the hermeneutics of Bernard Lonergan, and in the fall of 1994, David Fleischacker
introduced a course on the post-modern foundations of science and religion
to which he later added a course on Cosmopolis (Lonergan's diagnostic philosophy
of history). The results led to the formation of a third reading group
in September 1995 which also met weekly at St. Anselm's Abbey. In February
1996, Br. Dunstan addressed a meeting of the Catholic Association of Scientists
and Engineers with a talk introducing the significance of Bernard Lonergan's
theological contributions. In April, David Fleischacker gave a talk on
"Understanding Christ as the Incarnate Word in light of challenges posed
by modern thought" which drew on Lonergan's unpublished study De Verbo
Incarnato. In its monthly news bulletin, beginning with the April 1996
issue, the Catholic Association of Scientists and Engineers published two
articles (one by Dunstan Robidoux and another by J. Michael Stebbins(9))
to introduce the scope of Bernard Lonergan's achievement to interested
association members. Since February 1996, through the generosity of the
Brookings Institution, David Fleischacker and Dunstan Robidoux have been
able to attend bimonthly meetings of the "Downtown Washington Group" (moderator:
Tony Downs) to meet persons who might want to learn more about the usefulness
of Lonergan's analyses as they apply to a variety of economic, social,
and political problems. The formation of a fourth reading group in September
1996 necessitated a number of changes: the first and second reading groups
amalgamated to form a senior group of readers which now met on Friday mornings
at St. Anselm's Abbey; the former third group became the new second group,
now meeting on Thursday mornings.
With the help and cooperation
of Dr. J. Michael Stebbins of the Woodstock Theological Center, at Georgetown
University, a monthly seminar meeting at St. Anselm's Abbey was established
for the 1996-7 academic year to discuss Stebbins' recently published dissertation
The Divine Initiative: Grace, World-Order, and Human Freedom in the Early
Writings of Bernard Lonergan. An organizational meeting convened late in
September 1996 and subsequent sessions respectively discussed the role
of understanding in theological speculation, the created communication
of the divine nature as the principal instance of supernatural being, and
the 13th Century breakthrough in Catholic theology which occurred through
the discovery of the theorem of the supernatural. This new reading group
met in eight sessions over the span of the academic year. Most recently,
in January 1997, two new seminars, meeting weekly, were established as
forums for engaging in a long term study of Trinitarian theology and its
application to Church and world. One group coordinated the activities of
members who had already done some work on the Trinity; the second was designed
for beginners who, for the first time, wanted to delve into the theology
of the Trinity. The common goal was a careful reading and discussion of
all the major writings in the history of Trinitarian theology (from the
early patristic authors and proceeding into this 20th Century).
To organize all this work
more fully and to engage in a larger number of projects, a larger project
arose in terms of a new school established by David Fleischacker and Br.
Dunstan Robidoux at St. Anselm's Abbey: the Lonergan Institute for the
"Good Under Construction". The Lonergan Institute was incorporated as a
nonprofit organization as of April 18, 1997.(10)
Mission of St. Anselm's
Abbey
St. Anselm's Abbey, a Benedictine
monastery of monks belonging to the English Benedictine Congregation, was
itself established at the Catholic University of America as a center for
"advanced scientific research and study" in the spring of 1921 by a small
group of men who taught and studied at the university.(11)
Changes in the character of modern civilization were demanding that a group
of men should band together to "serve God, the Church, and their fellow-men
by united efforts in scientific research, hard, patient, laborious and
valuable to mankind" in a context which united a regular life of prayer
with scientific pursuits.(12) In a petition
addressed in 1922 to the Abbot of Downside Abbey in England, Fr. Thomas
Verner Moore, the principal founder of St. Anselm's Abbey, urged the value
of establishing a university associated Benedictine community in Washington
which would work for two related goals:
1.The monastic life
in the stability of a good observance of the rule of St. Benedict without
the likelihood of being withdrawn therefrom to distracting occupations
incompatible with a strict observance.
2. The opportunity of devoting
one's life to scientific research and so to add a religious current to
the stream of modern thought.(13)
Fr. Moore correctly believed
that a life of monastic prayer when combined with scientific research in
a mutually fruitful relation, would accelerate achievements in both realms
to the good of all. Co-ordinated team effort produces results that, otherwise,
would not be possible and which surpass possible individual accomplishment.
Scientific research is an
indirect but most effective apostolate. Scientists take an important place
among the leaders of modern thought, and the people are borne away by a
current of doctrine which has its origin in non-religious or even anti-religious
minds. To contribute to the tide of the world's scientific research a stream
of waters that will have its origin in the springs of the monastic life
is the object of the foundation that is here contemplated. We feel sure
that the union of the monastic life and intellectual research is possible
though we realize that it will mean curtailing the time that might be devoted
to study and research, were we individuals living alone as professors at
a University. Nevertheless the united efforts of the group would more than
make up for this sacrifice of time to the service of God in singing the
divine office.(14)
Later, in 1923, in a booklet
explaining his purpose and the dimensions of his vision, Fr. Thomas Verner
Moore further argued:
Intellectual life is no longer
confined to the writing table and private library. It requires laboratories
and libraries of vast extent, far beyond the limits of even the most excellent
private collections. The necessities of modern research are at hand at
the Catholic University of America with its laboratories and library, its
proximity to the Congressional Library, the Library of the Surgeon General
and the various departmental libraries of the United States Government.(15)
The reference to "laboratories"
in the context of the preceding quotation suggests that scientific activity
is to be mated with more traditional scholarly activities in a functional
relationship that moves from one type of activity to the other as the need
arises in order to resolve certain problems and questions. Scholarly activities
solve problems which scientific procedures cannot meet or match and vice
versa. On the one hand, scholarship tries to understand how other persons
have understood the universe of being which includes both the human and
non-human worlds and the historical trends to which they have belonged.
Once "scholarship" has been accomplished, science takes over, seeking further
understanding.(16) Since some problems
afflicting modern living require an approach that is defined by scientific
procedures (expanding and adding to the intelligibility produced by scholarly
understanding), a need thus exists for a reintegration which requires a
new form of cenobitic monasticism. It combines communal life and prayer
with an interrelated combination of scholarship and science. The union
effected should significantly contribute both to the quality of the Church's
life and to the welfare of the human community in general.
This new form of corporate
church life, expressed and embodied by the incorporation of St. Anselm's
Abbey in 1924, adaptatively borrowed from the purpose and activities of
a number of contemporary scientific institutes. The Rockefeller Institute
of New York, founded in 1901, figured as the most prominent paradigm with
a purpose dedicated to encouraging "scientific research in medicine and
biology."(17) New discoveries within the
various natural and human sciences were revealing intelligibilities, or
new understandings, which lead to new cultural evaluations and assessments
and thus new problems of interpretation. These give rise to "new moral
laws and new social laws, new definitions of what is right and wrong in
our social relations,"(18) which, in turn,
promote critical analyses and judgments which better inform how men and
women should live together in community, in a more fully human way. As
the inspiration behind the founding of St. Anselm's Abbey and as a pioneer
within the field of psychiatry, in his own day, Fr. Moore established and
operated a mental clinic in Washington which addressed mental problems
within childhood and the problem of juvenile delinquency. The founding
of a Lonergan Institute, therefore, comes in the wake of Fr. Moore's original
vision which lies at the basis of the abbey's foundation.
Through the agency of a Lonergan
institute, more persons would be able to join in the teaching and further
development of Lonergan's analyses as these apply to a wide range of fields
and problems. Moore's reference to the existence of facilities peculiar
to Washington underscores the truth of an ancient monastic principle. Monasteries
exist in particular places. But, if a monastery is to be a truly effective
organization and a viable co-operative effort, it must root itself in the
circumstances of its locale. Recognize all the conditions which uniquely
form the fabric of a given social milieu and human community; work with
these conditions to develop them; and, finally, transform them in ways
which raise the quality of human living.
Lonergan Institute for
the "Good Under Construction"
The vast forces of human
benevolence can no longer be left to tumble down the Niagara of fine sentiments
and noble dreams. They have to be assigned a function and harnessed within
the exchange system . . .
. . . Bernard
Lonergan, For A New Political Economy(19)
Without knowledge one cannot
have the virtues which make for right living . . .
. . . St. Augustine
The Trinity XII, 4, 21
The Lonergan Institute for
the "Good Under Construction," as its title indicates, will be concerned,
in its overall mission, with developing the good or, more precisely, the
human good which traditionally has been referred to as the "common good."(20)
As a good defined by cooperative choices that persons make, this good is
not something that is either static or simply given. It is something that
emerges. It is defined dynamically. It is the correlative of living a good
life. Operationally, heuristically, and initially, the good is what all
things desire.(21) It is what all things
seek, want, or love.(22) Hence, the human
good is constitute by any values chosen by human beings. This notion of
good is to be distinguished from a reductionist, aggregative notion of
good which is a correlative of biological existence (a desire for mere
life rather than a good life) and which is defined as a "mere collectivity
of private goods."(23) Rather, the human
good is the object of a universal, self-rational, and spiritual desire.
This desire encompasses all desires for good as well as all conditions
and activities that bring about good. As the desire, so the good is both
comprehensive and concrete. Abstractions can be good, but the good is not
abstract. The good is not an ideal even if good ideals exist. Desire for
good transcends purely intellectual desires seeking knowledge of reality
or being. Being and good are convertible since what is real, what is true,
or, simply, what is ranks as good. Both are intrinsically rational. Both
are intrinsically intelligible. Rational instances of common good emerge
as the fruit of human co-operation. The cooperation changes a society to
transform it. Something greater and more noble emerges: a state or commonwealth
(res publica). A multitude or gathering of persons is no longer or merely
a some kind of mob or gang. It is now bound together in a society defined
"by a mutual recognition of rights and mutual cooperation for the common
good."(24)Beyond particular goods specified
by the need to meet vital, physiological desires, men and women rationally
acknowledge the merit or value of other kinds of goods: goods specified
as goods of order and those specified as goods of value. Goods of order
denote patterns of co-operation amongst persons which supply particular
goods or discrete instances of good. Goods of value ground choices about
what good of order should be implemented for recurrently achieving desired
specific goods (food, drink, clothes, home, intimacy, children, knowledge,
virtue, or pleasure).(25) Shared value
as joint commitment and bonding agent forms persons into a community, and
ultimately explains why "human benevolence is normative for human
relationships."(26) The good deeds which
persons do for each other create conditions favoring expressions of gratitude.
The appreciation which attends receiving unexpected, unmerited goods, in
turn, grounds friendship. Rational thanksgiving acknowledges the power
and purpose of self-sacrificing love.
The problems bedeviling contemporary
understandings of the human good rank as follows. First, and most generally,
achievements of human good do not occur automatically, nor through the
imposition of orders and blueprints from remote sources. In both cases,
exercises of personal responsibility by persons possessing knowledge at
a local level are discouraged and even precluded. The human good, by contrast,
emerges deliberately. It is the fruit of rational choice (producing "friendships
of reason"(27) as opposed to relations
grounded in satisfying individual pleasures). Hence, for any solution to
be adequate with respect to any aspect of the human good, it requires a
form and specification which restricts "the realm of chance or fate or
destiny."(28) It works against the pressures
of any determinisms since the human good is a deliberate and conscious
achievement which only arises if, in human beings, "the realm of conscious
grasp and deliberate choice" is carefully enlarged and cultivated. For
instance, in economics (defined as a specification of the human good that
is itself defined by a complex dynamic recurrent set of activities consisting
of production, capital formation, and consumption), its proper object is
to be identified as a rising standard of living. However, how does one
responsibly and deliberately achieve a rising standard of living? How does
one improve the material conditions of life without also restricting and
perhaps forestalling the achievement of other goods? Or, to state the matter
more positively, how can one raise the standard of living in a way which
creates conditions facilitating the acquisition and enjoyment of other
goods?
Exhortations to entrepreneurs
. . . to pay a "just family wage" or guarantee "minimum standards of participation"
without either defining such terms functionally, or explaining how these
goals could be achieved without leading to bankruptcy, need a deeper context.(29)
Second, traditional understandings
of the "common good," in different departments of human activity, are no
longer adequate. These had fused demands for effective action with demands
for moral action within a context defined by inherited routines (whether
a stable form of government, a stable economics, or a stable technology):
through "static schemes of recurrence."(30)
Contexts for living are defined by a balance of forces perhaps best symbolized
by a closed circle. Persons, bodies, groups resist change. Movement is
inertial. Events are predictably certain. In Aristotle's understanding
of a circular pattern of events forming a cycle, a temporal sequence of
events ends in an event which sets conditions for the cycle to recur ad
infinitum.(31) In a human world modeled
on ideals which reflect invariant, recurrent natural cycles and which assume
divine origins for how a society is organized, roles for persons to perform
in a society have been defined by pre-established social structures governed
by entrenched elites.(32) The more things
change, the more things really remain the same. Nothing really changes.
However, with the shift of focus which now adds the element of development
attending to normative principles of development, a new question emerges.
How does one cope with rapid changes in patterns of cooperative human activity,
shifts within goods of order as new combinations of human relations emerge?(33)
Dynamic schemes of recurrence replace static schemes of recurrence as imbalances
disrupt inertia to reveal its obsolescence. Objects undergo change as subjects
initiate change. Events now become predictably probable. Hence, how does
one combine unity with freedom in a critical theory of progress?(34)
How does rationality connect with liberty? Unity with plurality? Communal
life with individual personal responsibility (as new orderings of human
beings are formed in terms of interdependent relationships)? What is the
liberty or ordered freedom that constitutes development, but which works
against decline? For example, in economics, in a switch from a focus on
the merits of economic stability,(35) what
is the "common good" in a context defined by rapid economic change, by
exponential economic growth? What is the inherent intelligibility, the
functional relations, statistical probabilities, genetic, and dialectical
principles of economic development as an ordered freedom that defines economic
human liberty and which achieves sustained economic growth? What conditions
must exist if other sets of conditions are to exist? The primary economic
question has changed from what it once was. The introduction of statistics
and history into economics this century has significantly increased demands
on economists and has encouraged attempts to understand business cycles,
recessions, and even the Great Depression. What are the different cycles
within economic activity and how does one determine when a particular cycle
is ending and when another is beginning?
Within economics, transitions
in activity propel an economy through a sequence of different economic
states because of accelerations that hasten the human production of a wide
variety of new goods and services.(36)
Much of the difficulty facing contemporary economics (if not also other
disciplines), is a methodological failure to identify the norms or ideals
discovered or sought by genetic method, as distinct from but related to
dialectical methods which critique the sources which bring about the absence
of these norms. Are recessions and depressions really necessary? Are the
ups and downs of concrete economic history entirely and purely natural?
Do they have to occur?
In the natural sciences,
the data of study are generally identified as stable, or as approximately
stationary (in physics and chemistry, if not in biology).
Throughout, nature is characterized
by repetitiveness: Over and over again it achieves mere reproductions of
what has been achieved already and any escape from such cyclic recurrence
is per accidens and in minore parte or, in modern language, due to chance
variation.(37)
But, in the human sciences,
the character of the data differs significantly. Phenomena are rarely stationary.
There is frequent change.(38) Evolutions
and developments reveal trends and orientations in the meanings which people
enjoy and the decisions which they make. In a diagnostic breakthrough within
economics as a human science, how then, in theory, can one avoid the booms
and slumps that so disrupt the material basis of human life that the result
is unwarranted, unnecessary human suffering (encouraging fractures within
political, cultural, personal, and religious orders)? In an analysis of
economic activity that is fully grounded in a new notion of human culture,
its basis is a verifiable anthropology that can talk about the accelerations
which human decisions introduce into the orders which they establish to
form a society. Accelerations occur both within and outside economics.
Third, good science prerequisitely
precedes effective charity.(39) Human beings
exist not as substances but as acting, active human subjects. They experience,
think, judge, and decide what they will do. Acts determine contents. Contents
only condition acts. They influence but do not determine. Human beings
respond to what other persons experience, think, judge, and decide. "No
man is an island, entire of itself."(40)
No act stands alone as no human person stands alone. Moral human behavior
properly results when persons choose to live in a manner where their doing
conforms with their knowing. A complete understanding of human nature only
emerges if what is essential, universal, and necessary in it is combined
with what is accidental, particular, and contingent. Nature conjoins with
historicity to reveal a normative historicity. Interior dynamic relations
constitutive of human subjectivity thus explain why the proper material
object of every human science is what men do in their different combined
acts. Acts establish conditions for subsequent acts and emerge from a prior
context of acts. In economic analysis, relations joining acts explain why
economists should attend to the interrelated functioning of schemes that
have been created by human agents and which account for the emergence of
new economic relations and new economic realities.(41)
The new focus of attention in this updated science of man grounds an analysis
that makes the exact identification of economic terms and relations more
probable. However, how does one engage in the kind of analysis that is
needed? What precepts does one abide by?
Economics, again, serves
as a text case. If the pitfalls of moral idealism are to be avoided in
forming intelligible economic policies and making responsible economic
decisions ("lovely proposals that don't work out and often do more harm
than good"(42)), "a causally and chronologically
inter-related view" emerges as the formal object of an adequate economics.(43)
As Newton, according to the tale, forgot the distinction between planets
swinging through the sky and apples falling in autumnal orchards, as he
reached beyond Kepler's and Galilei's laws to the profounder unity of the
theory of motion, so too must we forget distinctions between production,
distribution, and consumption, and reach behind the psychology of property
and the laws of exchange to form a more basic concept and develop a more
general theory...At a later stage of the argument...it will be possible
to give...more clear-cut definitions.(44)
A two-step procedure outlines
the basic method. First, economic ends meeting material needs for a society
must be clearly distinguished from other kinds and types of ends.(45)
Different kinds of appetites ground the creation of different types of
social systems (denoting other human orders or forms of human cooperation).
For instance, desires for interpersonal union and communion lead to marriage,
or some form of long term commitment that will ensure lifelong unions.
Desires for knowledge create educational systems which preserve the memory
of past cultural achievements and ensure the transmission of knowledge
to succeeding generations of younger persons. Desires manifesting love
of virtue ground the formation of other voluntary forms of human cooperation
whose purpose is to cultivate the human characters of participants. However,
in economics, specifically and as an example, how does one provide for
daily meals? A recurrent appetite for food and drink, for "shelter, clothing,
utilities, services, and amusement,"(46)
founds an economic system which delivers these goods as they are recurrently
needed. Because different appetites can war with each other, their differentiation
and critical assessment becomes a more pressing and urgent task as the
consequences of confusion grow in complexity and create problems. Their
incidence and frequency reveal the inadequacies of toleration as a rational
policy.
Second, grasp the correlations
linking all the events constituting the rhythm of economic activity before
proffering moral counsels about what anyone should do. Before giving any
moral advice to economists, find out how the human economy works.(47)
Determine its general rhythm:
elements and connections.
... while a person
who doles out cups of soup may help hundreds
of the poor, the scholar
who labors at his desk working out a new
economic theory may ultimately
bring prosperity to millions.(48)
Engage in an analysis that proposes
a radical objective. Move from description to explanation. Move from what
everybody commonly regards as truly and rightly significant to a primitive,
basic set of mutually dependent dynamic variables whose structured correlation
functions as a basis from which to examine any kind of economic problem.
A commonsense interpretation proposed for a moving object swung about a
point using an attached cord speaks of a circular motion caused by a circular
force.(49) Sense experience immediately
perceives a circular motion and, so, suggests the action of some kind of
circular force. However, analysis of discrepancies and ambiguities within
the data of sense reveals not one force but three distinct forces: three
linear forces which, together, account for one circular motion. A centrifugal
force propels an object outwards; a centripetal force moves an object toward
a center; and a gravitational force encourages bodies to move toward one
another in mutual attraction. The identification of three distinct linear
forces and their combined operation transcends the spontaneous anticipations
of human imagination since the perceived action of one force conflicts
with the perceived action of the other two. This development from within
physics suggests what kind of shift is needed if, in economics, description
is to yield to explanation.
In economics, one must move
from institutions like domestic households and business firms to the different
sets of functions which each performs, now at one time and now at another.(50)
Instead of trying to understand exchanges of economic goods based on calculations
of personal advantage, try to understand "how to correlate the buying and
selling of any and all sellers and buyers as they are related to one another
throughout the community."(51) As, again
in physics, physicists construct differentials to govern the flow of water,
analogously construct a differential calculus for economics.(52)
Establish the invariant pattern of human economic operations which govern
the innovative dynamics of human economic flow (human economic activity,
as constituted by economic experience, economic understanding, economic
judgment, and economic decision). The operations change. Their varying
composition resembles the changing quantities represented by mathematical
variables. But, their correlation is a general function that does not itself
change. Identify this basic function as an anticipative heuristic and,
from that point on, use what you know to solve for what you do not know.
In a more precise fashion, move from the known to the unknown. "The natural
way to proceed is from what is more known and clearer to us to what is
by nature clearer and more known."(53)
In the last analysis, competent moral action on matters touching economics
requires competent economic analysis if specific economic precepts are
to be determined for effective corrective action.(54)
From an understanding of economic reality come apprehensions of economic
possibility and what will probably occur once different proposed courses
of action are implemented.(55)
In any field, to understand
the Good that will lead to its realization, attend to the critical understanding
which occurs in science and mathematics.(56)
Learn. Adapt. Transfer. Employ. If, in physics, Newton's law of universal
gravitation explains different sets of movements pertaining to the earth,
sun, moon, and other planets, in the human sciences, no reason precludes
why analogous laws cannot be discovered to correlate differing patterns
of activity which, together, produce different human goods.(57)
In economics, for example, laws which express the basic cycles which make
recurrent ongoing goods for consumers, constitutive of their standard of
living, are functionally and statistically related to laws which express
surplus cycles which make recurrent goods for producers, constitutive of
their capital investment. Two interacting cycles constitute the intelligibility
or meaning of economic life.(58) Relations
between consumers and producers are grossly affected and, at times, transformed
by technological changes: changes in how things are produced. New means
of production reconfigure relations between producers of consumer goods
and the manufacturers and suppliers of capital goods. Capital goods producers
market new technologies that accelerate the production of goods and services
to previously unknown, unforseen levels. Wiser economic decisions follow
if these shifts are first distinguished and then detected through a statistical
analysis that identifies trends.
However, in the end, even
if all these developments in the human sciences have occurred, one point
merits mention. It is impossible for human beings to create any system
or good of order which is so good that human beings need not themselves
be good.(59) The smooth functioning of
any good of order within society and culture ultimately requires more than
competent analysis. At some point, other questions emerge to transcend
the concerns and activity of a given order. These introduce dimensions
of good which raise the life of a given species of activity to levels that
it cannot attain by itself. Goods existing at one level exist for the sake
of other, higher goods.(60) The emergence
of these other goods becomes more likely.
As a term, "common good"
was used by Bernard Lonergan when he developed it as a means of retrieving
and applying traditional but updated understandings of the moral life to
the praxis of human living. In his understanding of the human good, he
developed a way of distinguishing and relating all the various goods that
human beings variously seek. The range moves from the food that persons
eat and produce in agricultural systems to the religious graces of God
that are carried and bestowed through religious tradition and its institutions.
Economic goods deriving from a well-ordered pattern of economic interchange
provide a necessary material basis for cultures to flourish,(61)
yet, they do not determine cultural beliefs and values.(62)
Wherever decisions occur and values are brought to life defines what is
meant by the human good. Yet, the human good, as it underlies transcendent
principles, is something which is rooted firmly in the world as it is.
Hence, to identify our institute as involved in constructing the human
good according to the philosophical and theological developments of Bernard
Lonergan means that we will be concerned with concrete life as it is lived
in our families, neighborhoods, education system, political system, cultural
activities, religious practices, and theological reflections, and the relations
joining these various activities, or moments when we choose some set of
values or goods. The somewhat general title denoting our institute implies
engaging in a multidisciplinary and complementary labor which will be subdivided
and organized according to the different kinds of activities that we do
in our society and world.
In terms of specific goals,
as a nonprofit organization and medium of communication, our institute
will be defined by the following objectives and purposes:
(1) establishing and maintaining
a school at St. Anselm's Abbey (a Benedictine foundation at the Catholic
University of America) that will function as a training institute open
to all interested members of the general public. It is dedicated to meeting
the general goal of grasping the insights of Bernard J. F. Lonergan S.J.
and translating them into intelligible terms and categories that can be
applied to a wide range of human problems and difficulties. More specifically
and accurately, this goal translates into activities that are distinguished
and defined by two related objectives:
(a) introducing persons to
the work of Bernard Lonergan in a manner which brings them into his thought
and ideas and which works to appropriate and develop methods of analysis
that, as co-ordinates, can be used to achieve classical, statistical, genetic,
and dialectical insights with respect to all aspects of the human good
(in society, in culture, in personal relations, and in religion);
(b) realizing Lonergan's
project of developing a functionally specialized metaphysics that would
act as a general transformation equation: mediating meaning to persons
in a manner which integrates the two realms of meaning found in common
sense and theory; all human activity constitutes the appropriate data of
this metaphysical analysis. Using Lonergan's own words, the formal object
is "the conception, affirmation, and implementation of the integral heuristic
structure of proportionate being"(63)
(2) pursuing these goals
through advocacy, research, training, study, lectures, publication, creation
of educational materials, and special projects in order to address three
distinct but related goals:
(a) foundational concerns
bearing on the long term development of Catholic theology. As a training
institute for theology, we will nurture the Church's theological apostolate
by fostering the religious, personal, moral, and intellectual context in
which a person develops theology. The work of the institute will not seek
to duplicate the contributions of already existing academic departments
of theology that exist at the Catholic universities and institutes of our
local community. We will use the prescriptions of Lonergan's theology(64)
as a unifying context to
advance both the theory and practice of Catholic theology in a manner that
faithfully respects the tradition while genuinely responding to the call
of aggiornamento issued by the Second Vatican Council (critical aggiornamento).
We will offer seminars, discussion groups, and support for the spiritual,
moral, and intellectual formation of theologians. In addition, we will
provide both a location and financial support for theologians who wish
to further the thought of Bernard Lonergan through research and scholarship
(one of the possibilities includes funding for undergraduates who are majoring
in theology and would like to spend a summer doing research with us).
(b) current cultural and
social problems as they condition and characterize contemporary modern
life in our world (and as they condition the life of Catholic theology).
We will address current cultural and social issues by translating Lonergan's
analyses into the needs of daily life. We will be hiring promising individuals
for research that will combine thinking, reflection, and action. This research
will address questions that pertain to the "human good" raised by ecumenical
issues, the human and social sciences, physical science and technology,
and health care. Using the results of these studies, we will offer free
seminars, courses, and discussion groups to the general public which will
help people to integrate work, family, political, and international activities
with their faith.
(c) pedagogical problems
bearing on the need to develop a coordinated educational curriculum that
will extend from kindergarten through to college levels of education. As
a resource center for education (and at the prompting of John and Pasqualina
Young), we will address the foundations and nature of all stages of Catholic
education. We will treat issues pertaining to a coordinated curriculum
extending from kindergarten through to graduate school as well as interdisciplinary
issues using Lonergan's understanding of human consciousness, of human
development, and of human community. With the fruits of these studies,
we will offer our resources to educators through seminars, courses, and
personal collaboration.
(3) expanding and re-defining
our educational program from time to time as deemed necessary in order
to meet the continuing challenge of advancing the work of Bernard Lonergan's
analysis.
Future of the Institute
Concern with "the good under
construction" is simultaneously a concern with a stewardship of history
that is initiated by addressing key dimensions of social, economic, political,
cultural, and religious life in light of Lonergan's notions pertaining
to community and history. Common sense,(65)
theory,(66) and interiority(67)
(as practiced and implemented and reconfigured) respectively mediate the
many different meanings and values which, together, effect our development,
decline, and redemption: hence, the necessity of carefully distinguishing
between which acts belong to which patterns. By ongoing appraisals of how
we understand and respond to the world around us, we set conditions for
developments that can avoid decline and embrace redemption. Thus, in our
labors, we hope to continue raising crucial funds to support sustained
research that will develop insights from the wealth of our Catholic tradition
and, through education, make them available for the needs of today. Special
attention will be given to building financial support for lay theologians
since their numbers continue to increase due to the call of Pope John Paul
II and the Church.
With respect to the history
of the meanings and values constituting the deposit and substance of our
culture, education, and theology, the promotion of their stewardship is
our goal. Albeit, we hope it is a stewardship that is attentive, intelligent,
reasonable, responsible, and loving. No other kind possesses merit or standing.
The whole purpose of this
institute is to improve the way that Catholics and other Christians communicate
their faith to all aspects of life (whether in politics, economics, education,
or in the family) by improving the way that we live out the religious precepts
of loving God and loving our Neighbor as Christ had done and commands us
to do. The future of the institute will be based in this, whatever direction
it goes. It is our intention to move slowly and with prudence when deciding
at each step what should be done. It would not be wise to move too quickly
since rash decisions could initiate a series of actions that would create
an uncontrolled, potentially destructive movement. Thus we rely on God's
goodness, fortified by your prayers.
Who is Bernard Lonergan?
I know more luminously
than anything else that I have nothing I have not received . . .
... Bernard
Lonergan, letter to Henry Keane, 22 January 1935
The knowledge of
earthly and celestial things is highly prized by the human race. Its better
specimens, to be sure, attach even greater value to knowledge of self;
and the mind that knows its own weakness deserves more respect than the
one that, with no thought at all for a little thing like that, sets out
to explore, or even knows already, the course of the stars, while ignorant
of the course it should follow itself to its own health and strength.
...St. Augustine
The Trinity IV, 1
Bernard J. F. Lonergan was
a Canadian Jesuit priest, born in 1904 in Buckingham, Quebec, who entered
the Jesuit order in 1922 at the age of 17.(68)
From 1940 to 1983, he taught theology in schools located in different parts
of the world: in Montreal, Toronto, Rome, and in the United States (for
instance, in 1971-2, Stillman Professor of Catholic Studies at Harvard,
and, in 1975-83, Visiting Distinguished Professor at Boston College).(69)
In 1941, he completed a doctoral dissertation on grace and freedom in Aquinas
in order to solve a long disputed question: the relation connecting God's
salvific initiatives with the causality of human freedom. How is God's
transcendence to be understood in a manner which respects God's goodness
and the precepts and responsibilities of human freedom?(70)
Lonergan went on to write other treatises on Aquinas,(71)
asking a basic question: how did Aquinas accomplish what he, in fact, achieved?
He spent eleven years (1938-1949) "reaching up to the mind of Aquinas."(72)
One of his significant discoveries
identified the key role of insight within theology.(73)
By 1935, Lonergan had concluded that the current reigning interpretation
of Aquinas dominant in Rome was "absolutely wrong." It is a "consistent
misinterpretation" which is explained by Scotist and Suarezian interpretations
of Aquinas which falsely suppose that intellectual knowledge or intellectual
activity is fundamentally akin to "seeing." From a basic similarity in
terms of acts, it follows that the contents are basically similar. They
directly correspond to each other. Contents of acts of understanding radically
resemble contents derived from sense perceptions. Images are ideas and
ideas, images. Ideas depict, represent, and mirror images.(74)
Picture-thinking. "Image theory of ideas." Thinking and understanding are
not differentiated from acts of experiencing, sensing, and seeing; nor
are they differentiated from acts of remembering and imagining which either
recall past experiences or creatively make them up. The lack of distinction
thus leads to interpretations of cognition that speak about intuition.
"In whatever mode, or by whatsoever means, our knowledge may related to
objects, it is at least quite clear, that the only manner in which it immediately
relates to them, is by means of an intuition [Anschauung]."(75)
What is meant by an object is that which is given to sense experience.(76)
Sensible experience or sensitive operations (seeing, hearing, tasting,
touching, and smelling) define what an object is. Memory and imagination,
recollecting and fantasizing, like allies, extend, prolong, and refashion
the initial experience apprehended in sense.
As a consequence, understanding,
as an act (constituted by its own interrelation of elements specifying
distinct events), is not directly or clearly adverted to since it is viewed
as an unconscious, automatic process which produces universal concepts
that are directly abstracted from concrete, individual sensible data. Each
universal concept then articulates an essence, form, or intelligibility
that is specified as an individual nature informing some thing or being.
Natures articulated into linguistic form specified by concepts are related
to each other by logical analysis. Concepts are compared to one another
to be joined and distinguished as they resemble, imply, or contradict each
other. Understanding comes from concepts and not concepts, from understanding.(77)
By a kind of oversight, understanding as a grasp of connections or relations
(the perennial object of understanding, basic to the very nature of insight
or act of understanding) ceases to inform the meaning of an intelligibility
defined in a concept. Relations are viewed as something extrinsic. They
stand apart and are always to be disassociated from the nature of things.
The essence, form, or intelligibility of a thing is defined apart from
relations to other things. Intelligible connections are not constitutive.
They do not inform or constitute meaning. They lack relevance because they
are not obvious. They cannot be seen (since they can only be understood
or grasped by minds that understand and do not see).On the contrary, however,
understanding is unlike seeing. It transcends seeing. As an activity, it
"supervenes."(78) It goes beyond acts and
contents of sensing, remembering, or imagining to apprehend contents that
are non-sensible and unimaginable. But, unfortunately, Scotist and Suarezian
views of Aquinas work from a contrary perspective. An unexamined, unquestioned
"naive realism" (to use Lonergan's terminology) informs the methodology
of current neo-Thomist interpretations in a manner which undermines the
probability of truly understanding the meanings which Aquinas has expressed
through the medium of his text. Meaning does not correspond to sense data
nor does it correspond to derivatives given in memory or imagination.(79)
It cannot be made to correspond with them. Meaning does not exist as a
set of images that dwell within an author's mind. The human mind is not
a holding container (like a jug of milk or flask of brandy). The pervasiveness
of this unquestioned naive realism among theologians vitiates all subsequent
work in Catholic theology unless its influence is properly accounted for
and excised.
Without further developments
in the understanding of theologians, theological activity will degenerate
into some form of description or a play with language which misemploys
the inherited vocabulary of theological language. Meaning is soon divorced
from its expression. Quoting Lonergan's own words:
... if method is
essential for the development of understanding, it is no less true that
method is mere superstition when the aim of understanding is excluded.
Such exclusion is the historian's temptation to positivism. On the other
hand, the temptation of the manual writer is to yield to the conceptualist
illusion; to think that to interpret Aquinas he has merely to quote then
argue; to forget that there does exist an initial and enormous problem
of developing one's understanding; to overlook the fact that, if he is
content with the understanding he has and the concepts it utters, then
all he can do is express his own incomprehension in the words but without
the meaning uttered by the understanding of Aquinas.(80)
The process of discovery
in theology, as in any discipline, always leads to and requires insight
which, reflexively, is to be understood as an act of understanding that
grasps forms in images (Aristotle, De anima, III, 7, 431b 2). Understanding
is essentially discursive and not intuitive. Its occurrence requires sustained
individual effort. One does not blithely assume that one understands. Instead,
and willingly, one wrestles with diverse questions; engages in diverse
experiences that will supply new, relevant data; considers alternative
views; and experiments with novel ways of framing questions.(81)
In general, one's inquiry is wide ranging. It follows many, diverse paths
until one finds the one that unites all variables into an intelligible
whole. In the resulting understanding, all the variables make sense. Understanding
emerges within persons and society as the only form of power which does
not require any force or external coercion.
Lonergan furthered this discovery
on the importance of insight and expressed it through his analysis of cognition
in Insight. He acquired an interest in methodology which, for him, meant
the way of discovery and invention which makes discovery and invention
both more probable and more frequent. What kind of person, what kind of
mind is needed for inquiring into a subject in order to reach a larger
number of insights that are both critical and verifiable? As significant,
for instance, as was the development of Newton's physics, was not the greater
discovery a new way of doing physics and mathematics?(82)
A combination of mathematical and empirical analysis . . . ? A new procedure
transcends the haphazard limitations of a trial-and-error approach to effect
an acceleration and to reveal a new continuum: the genesis, correction,
and replacement of older theories by newer theories using an identical
means. Theories come and go. But, the basis of advance is not a new theoretical
discovery. It is the reliability of one's method or procedure. This is
what extends the scope and depth of one's understanding to new knowledge
and a new wisdom that makes finer distinctions. No limits obtain since
the facilitating agent is an unrestricted desire grounding an unrestricted
creativity. Desires for understanding initiate the questions that structure
the tactics of all inquiry.
In any given discipline,
we must begin by identifying the appropriate method of inquiry as a "normative
set of operations that lead to cumulative and progressive results" and
the result is the basis of all subsequent advance. When, in mathematics,
François Viète (d. 1603) first postulated, "Let x equal the
unknown," he uncovered a procedure which grounded subsequent exponential
growth in mathematics.(83) So, too, in
theology, no reason precludes the possibility of analogous developments.(84)
In theology, as elsewhere, the same precepts apply. Proceed from yourself
"because it is the self that experiences, that understands and judges and
decides on being."(85) Appropriate self-concern
leads to genuine self-transcendence.(86)
Hence, discover who you are as an experiencing, thinking, judging, and
acting subject. Shift from a concern with books and textual analysis and
move into a process of self-mentoring (usually known as self-appropriation).(87)
Learn that you have a mind and that it is fun to use it. Solve problems
for yourself by exercising it in an ordered, patterned manner that is guided
by its own norms. Verify ideas by adverting to your interior life, to your
own conscious data, to the data of your own consciousness.(88)
Discover the kind of person that you must become in order, adequately,
to do good theology. To distinguish bad theology from good theology, discover
the kind of method which properly constitutes method in theology and contrast
it with any counterfeits. Instead of trying to understand spirit through
analogies grounded in matter, begin with spirit.(89)
Understand its structure and you will soon come to a better understanding
of matter.(90) The whole precedes its parts.
Some of Lonergan's fundamental analyses regard the role of religious, moral,
and intellectual conversion and their subsequent development within theology.
The basis of advance is a new human subject. "The end appears to each man
in a form answering to his character."(91)
In developing his philosophy
and theology, Lonergan also created a way of situating or mapping all human
activities, from science and technology to family and religion which we
will develop and apply in our institute work. His last years were devoted
to a projected book on macro-economic theory. Back approximately in 1942,
he had written an unpublished manuscript "For a New Political Economy"
and, then in 1944, "An Essay on Circulation Analysis." In 1949 when he
began to write Insight, he adopted, as his personal motto, a phrase coined
by Pope Leo XIII (in his 1879 encyclical Aeterni Patris) that would express
the character of his theological policy: vetera novis augere et perflcere.
Add to and perfect the old by means of the new. Hence, preserve what is
good in the vetera and embrace what is authentic and ground breaking in
the novis.(92)
For these reasons, Lonergan's
work as a philosopher and theologian falls within a Thomist tradition known
as "transcendental Thomism" whose origins date from the early decades of
the present century and the labors of Joseph Maréchal (1878-1944),
a Belgian Jesuit who worked at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium.
Fr. Lonergan is situated
within the Thomistic tradition that is known as the Louvain tradition,
which began at the University of Louvain's Higher Institute of Philosophy
which was founded in 1889 at the request of Pope Leo XIII. The thrust of
this school was ". . . to engage in vital dialogue with post-Kantian philosophical
currents then active, and to confront the traditional philosophy with the
findings of modern science." The members of this school saw their task
as being the epistemological justification of metaphysics and the preservation
of the faith in the face of the Kantian critique of knowledge which had
left the human mind unable to claim any knowledge of "reality as such"
in the realm of speculation.(93)
Inaugurating a new point
of departure for the study of human cognition, Maréchal argued that
"Kant's critical philosophy could be reconciled with Thomism if the intellect
was conceived as a dynamic, rather than static, faculty."(94)
The human mind possesses an internal drive or orientation that self-constitutes
itself as a mind. It engages in a series of different acts that should
be clearly distinguished from each other. Their combined effect produces
knowledge of real objects. The mind does not work from innate ideas nor,
strictly speaking, does it contemplate any external or internal objects.
It does not passively receive impressions that are induced by extra-mental
objects. It exercises its own power. It is active. It asks and answers
questions in an activity that achieves its own objects: intellectual objects.(95)
The rationality of its actions emerges as a term of its own understanding,
its self-understanding. Rationality cannot arise in anything that is not
itself mental; that is not itself mind; that is not actively understanding;
that is not engaged in rational activity. The problem with Kant's theory
of the human mind is too closed and too static.(96)
Judgment does not play a distinct but complementary role as a species of
understanding.
However, although Lonergan
avers that "Louvain substantially agrees with me," he, elsewhere, avers
that no single label adequately identifies the character of his work (from
the viewpoint of inherited classificatory schemes).(97)
Lonergan's originality as a thinker, by posing new kinds of questions which
re-articulate and differentiate traditional distinctions, explains why
it is so "difficult to situate his writing within familiar categories of
intellectual endeavor."(98) Positively
speaking, his philosophic perspective seeks to ground itself in the broadest
horizon possible - in an infinite horizon. Negatively speaking, Lonergan
cannot be described as either a phenomenologist or as an analytic philosopher
since he is greater than any of these. Admittedly, his Jesuit training
initially gave him an orientation that derives from Scholastic philosophy.
However, this approach was soon joined with an understanding of modem mathematics
and science that was mated with reinterpretations of Aristotle and Aquinas.
A more precise and correct grasp of Lonergan's role and significance within
the cultural ferment of our times will only arise through pursuing the
inquires which he had initiated "as the contributions of a single man."
On the significance of his
contribution within and outside Catholic circles, as a general comment,
it should be noted that Lonergan's call for a "total rethinking of Christian
doctrine" through tools of analysis, grounded in a third sphere of meaning
that transcends the more familiar types of meaning that are experienced
and known through common sense and theory, suggests the aptness of Karl
Jaspers' prediction about a second paradigm shift within the history of
human society and culture. Our present times are moving toward a new axial
period which will be as profound and as far reaching as was the first.
For more than a hundred years
it has been gradually realized that the history of scores of centuries
is drawing to a close.(99)
During the first axial period,
philosophy differentiated itself from myth. Logos emerged from the semantic
womb of mythos to distinguish and, then, separate itself as a realm of
meaning.(100) During the fifth century
BC, roughly between 800 and 300 BC, a series of cultural changes drastically
altered human self-conceptions in different, disparate parts of the world.(101)
Without any apparent interaction, Confucius, Lao-Tao, the Upanishad authors,
Bhudda, Zarathustra, the Old Testament prophets, Homer, and the Greek philosophers
and tragedians initiated a spiritual revolution which, until recently,
formed the outlook of the modern world. Its sufficiency was not widely
questioned until, perhaps, the first third of the nineteenth century (and
the coincident rise of popular journalism). The breakup of "the great,
stable empires" that had flowered in ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Crete,
and the valleys of the Indus and the Hoang Ho had created conditions which
forced individuals to ask questions about alternative sources of meaning
(the birth of a higher criticism).(102)
What is really real and to whom or where should one turn? The collapse
of political and religious meaning as this had been grounded in myths (formed
by the fancies of human imagination and communicated through narrated stories),
encouraged personal exercises of reasoning and urged the necessity of assuming
personal responsibility for the meanings which one experiences and knows
in life. Reality clashes with appearances. It possesses an intrinsically
rational structure. It is not a correlate of affect and imagination. True
human happiness is not simply a product of pragmatic success.(103)
A second axial period or
new "leap in being"(104) is now suggesting
itself as inherited modes and procedures experience a growing irrelevance.
Their continued use, to meet certain classes and kinds of questions, increasingly
betrays a chronic ineptitude or inappropriateness which, in turn, suggests
the necessity of looking for new tools in an analysis which operates from
a reflection on meaning. The object is "a radically different conception
of the unity and organization of cultural pursuits."(105)
A new conceptuality or begrifflichkeit is needed to replace the conceptuality
undergirding classical culture in a shift effected by a "way of understanding
ourselves which displaces reactionary practical realism."(106)
Method becomes differentiated from theoretical or "systematic" closed structures.
It emerges as a dynamic and non-static structure which is a heuristic and
not a theory or hypothesis. This heuristic expands pre-existing wholes
or frameworks to reach the largest of all possible wholes (or frameworks).
A reflection on human acts of meaning grounds new controls for meaning
which, as applied, renew human culture. Men and women enter a new cultural
context, a new epoch.
Within the Catholic Church
and Catholic culture, the significance of Bernard Lonergan's achievement
is sometimes best adverted to by some of his Catholic critics. For instance,
in his analysis of both the nature and the history of Catholic theology,
Fr. John Aldan Nichols admits that Lonergan produced the "fullest account
of method in theology since the work of Melchior Cano in the 1650s."(107)
On the positive side, by his admirers, it has been noted that, prior to
his death, at the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), Fr. Lonergan functioned
as a theological adviser for many of the bishops. On the extent of Lonergan's
contribution respecting the decisions and the teaching of the Second Vatican
Council, Gerald Emmett Cardinal Carter (who attended the Council) testifies
as follows:
I have always maintained
that Bernard Lonergan was the hidden, valid source of much of the theology
of the Second Vatican Council. I almost used the expression that he lurked
in the Vatican Council giving advice to the periti who then paraded it
in the council, generally through their Bishops. But one could never think
of Bernie as lurking! That crazy laugh of his always gave me the impression
that he was laughing at the world. And those who laugh at the world don't
lurk. But what I would mean to say is that he never paraded his wisdom
or for that matter his many contributions to other people.(108)
Later, in 1971, while Lonergan
was residing in Toronto at Regis College (then located in Willowdale, Ontario),
on the initiative of Frederick E. Crowe, a center dedicated to encouraging
the study of Lonergan's work was established: the Lonergan Center of Regis
College. In 1984-85, it became the Lonergan Research Institute. As an archive
it houses all his papers, notes, and lecture materials and, since the early
years, nine other Lonergan centers have appeared elsewhere in the world:
in Montreal, Boston, Santa Clara, Naples, Rome, Manila, Dublin, Sydney,
and Melbourne.(109) The Toronto center
gratuitously publishes an annual Bulletin and a subscription publication
appearing quarterly: the Lonergan Studies Newsletter. It updates readers
on current events in Lonergan research (books, reviews, articles, lectures,
dissertations, workshops, and symposia).(110)
On computer Internet, the "Lonergan Web Site" designates a newly created
Lonergan home page created in Ottawa which supplies information for anyone
interested in learning about Lonergan's work and clicks to other Lonergan
sites.(111) Other WWW Lonergan sites include
the British Lonergan Association, the Lonergan University College (of Concordia
University in Montreal), Terry Tekippe's Home Page, and Lonergan-L. New
sites are appearing almost monthly. At the different Lonergan centers throughout
the world, unedited unpublished English translations of Lonergan's Latin
works are also available for purchase as they await publication.
In his lifetime, Lonergan
received a total of nineteen honorary doctorates from both Catholic and
non-Catholic universities in the United States and Canada (for instance,
in 1975, a doctorate from McMaster University, of Baptist origins, located
in Hamilton, Ontario).(112) In 1971, the
Canadian government created him a Companion of the Order of Canada, the
highest award that it can directly bestow on any of her citizens. In 1970,
in Tampa, Florida, the "First International Lonergan Congress" convened
for four days: 77 participants discussing 65 papers.(113)
Since then, additional international congresses in conjunction with other
conferences and meetings have convened in different places around the world:
to name some locations, Halifax, Milwaukee, Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal,
Boston, Rome, Philadelphia, Edmonton, Dallas, Dublin, and in Mexico City.
Shortly before Lonergan's death in 1984, a second "International Symposium
on Lonergan's Thought" convened at Santa Clara University in California.(114)
Previously, in 1974, a special convocation at the University of Chicago
honored Lonergan in conjunction with fellow Jesuit Karl Rahner (1904-1984).
In 1975, Lonergan was named a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy.(115)
In 1984, the University of Toronto agreed to publish a definitive critical
edition of Lonergan's works in a series of 22 volumes entitled The Collected
Works of Bernard Lonergan.(116) Since
the initial appearance of Lonergan's published works in English, a growing
number of translations have made Lonergan available to readers outside
the English-speaking world.(117) To date,
Insight: A Study of Human Understanding has been translated into Italian
and German, and contracts have been signed with the University of Toronto
Press for French and Spanish translations. A Polish translation has been
started for a separate edition. Method in Theology (first published in
1972) has appeared in French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Polish. A French
translation of Verbum: Word and Idea in Aquinas (initially published as
a series of articles in 1946-49) appeared in 1966 prior to its appearance
in English in 1967.(118) In Milan, an
Italian critical edition of Lonergan's Collected Works is being prepared
in a project which, in 1993, produced a first volume: Comprehendere e Essere
(Understanding and Being). Other works by Lonergan already translated into
Italian include Grace and Freedom, Philosophy of God, and Theology, and
Doctrinal Pluralism. Collections of articles by Lonergan have also been
translated: two in French, two in Spanish, and one in German. Single articles
by him have also been translated: five into Japanese, and one each into
Chinese, Danish, Polish, and Flemish. Around the world, to date, almost
300 doctoral dissertations have been written on Lonergan's thought (about
200 while still living) and more than a third have come to print, in whole
or part.(119) Three journals advance further
studies in Lonergan: since 1983, Method: A Journal of Lonergan Studies
(published biannually to further the "interpretive, historical, and critical
study of the philosophical, theological, economic, and methodological writings
of Bernard Lonergan"(120) while also seeking
to promote "original research into the methodological foundations of the
sciences and disciplines"); Lonergan Workshop Journal (also published by
the Lonergan Institute at Boston College but as a collection of papers
given at the annual Lonergan Workshop held at Boston College);(121)
and Australian Lonergan Workshop (presenting papers given at Lonergan Workshops
meeting in Australia).(122) In 1990, the
University of Toronto Press established a companion series to Lonergan's
Collected Works: publishing works about Lonergan by other authors. Four
books have appeared thus far: Theology and the Dialectics of History by
Robert M. Doran; Lonergan and Feminism edited by Cynthia S. W. Crysdale;
Lonergan and Kant: Five Essays on Human Knowledge by Giovanni B. Sala;
and The Divine Initiative: Grace, World-Order, and Human Freedom in the
Early Writings of Bernard Lonergan by J. Michael Stebbins.
On the extent of Lonergan's
renown outside specialist circles, in 1965 and 1970, Time magazine published
two laudatory articles on Lonergan (in addition to an obituary in 1984).
In "The Towering Thought of Bernard Lonergan" appearing in 1970, Time cited
him as "considered by many intellectuals to be the finest philosophic thinker
of the 20th century."(123) In the same
year, Newsweek described Insight as "a philosophical classic comparable
in scope to Hume's Inquiry Concerning Human Understanding."(124)
As Newsweek added:
With that boldness
characteristic of genius, Jesuit philosopher Bernard Lonergan has set out
to do for the twentieth century what even Aquinas could not do for the
thirteenth . . . It may take another generation for his thought to be fully
felt within the church that nourished him, but Lonergan's reach is already
far wider.(125)
Lonergan's work in economic
theory presents one instance. In 1930, although graduating from the University
of London with a BA in Greek, Latin, French, and mathematics,(126)
he then wrote a thesis on economics. The great depression of the 1930's
then encouraged him to engage in economic analysis in order to identify
the different patterns and rhythms that constitute economic activity as
a specific enterprise and operation. While his interest shifted after 1944
as he turned to other problems, he returned to economic theory after the
publication of Method in Theology in 1972. At Boston College 1973-83, he
developed and taught a course on "Macro-economics and the Dialectic of
History" and guided a number of graduate seminars on macroeconomics while
attempting to complete a book for publication. From extensive notes prepared
prior to his death in 1984, an editorial team, working in Toronto, is presently
attempting to transform Lonergan's unfinished manuscript into a book suitable
for publication. The labor continues.
Schedule of Studies
re: reading Insight: A Study of Human Understanding
Since the work is divided
into chapters and sections which address issues and questions as they appropriately
arise, the subdivision of sections within Insight will identify both the
number and focus of distinct reading groups. Each would study and analyze
a specific section for three to four months (or for approximately one semester).
The program is designed to accommodate anyone who might wish to take a
semester off, at some point, before returning to do more work on Insight.
Where possible, for pedagogical reasons, we will encourage the formation
of two kinds of groups when deciding on the tactics of study. Individuals
coming from a scientific or technical background would form one group while
individuals trained in the humanities would form another group. These choices
should synchronize the activities of individual members in a way which
would accelerate the process of learning and discovery as members of a
group work together to appropriate the lessons of Bernard Lonergan's thought.
It is hoped that a reading group would be able to complete a thorough study
Lonergan's Insight after three years. By that point, a given group should
be self-sufficient and able to initiate its own studies with only minimal
assistance from Institute personnel.
Finances
In general, our policy is
never to charge dues or fees for services rendered since the object of
our work is to pass on to others what we have freely received in the hope
that what we have given will be freely passed on to others (without charge
or obligation). What we have, we do not sell since it is not a commercial
product. Hence, we function on the basis of gift exchange.
At present, we hope to raise
$500,000 in order to fund both faculty and a series of research projects
that are linked to the three major tasks mentioned earlier (including both
a study of the relationship between religious formation and theology, and
the preparation of an integrated curriculum for Catholic education from
elementary to graduate school). We are hoping that the majority of our
funding will be solicited from foundations and friends.
In response to questions
soliciting suggestions for semester-long seminars of directed reading and
classroom discussion, we quote a sum of $150.00, but this figure represents
an arbitrary designation. Participants and colleagues are free to exercise
their own judgment on what they might wish to give if a decision of this
kind is made. For additional information, please contact us at the following
address:
Lonergan Institute for
the "Good Under Construction" St. Anselm's Abbey
4501 S. Dakota Ave.
NE Washington, D.C. 20017-2753
tel. 202-269-6650 fax 202-269-2312
Internet www.lonergan.org
If you wish to make a tax
deductible donation, please send cheques payable to "The Lonergan
Institute" to the aforecited
address.
Immediate Status of the Institute
As noted earlier, for the
last five years, discussion and reading groups focusing upon Lonergan's
book Insight have been held either at the Catholic University of America
or at St. Anselm's Abbey. These groups continue to meet on a weekly basis
although all meetings now occur at St. Anselm's Abbey. Notices about Institute
meetings and seminars occasionally appear in the Catholic Standard (the
archdiocesan newspaper) and flyers are regularly distributed among the
schools of theology constituting the Washington Theological Consortium,
not excluding Georgetown University and a number of local parishes. The
St. Anselm's Abbey School Newsline (appearing monthly) now includes information
about the activities of the Lonergan Institute for the "Good Under Construction"
as does the Corbie Chronicle that is also published by the school. Mr.
Nick Heidenberg of Real Presence Communications now functions as the Institute's
press agent: he prepares press releases as needed for media distribution,
promotes the publication of articles arising from the Institute's work,
and arranges interviews for taping and broadcast on television and radio.
The seminar begun by J. Michael Stebbins continues to meet monthly and
perhaps become a weekly meeting as interest grows. The launching of this
new seminar, in conjunction with two seminars devoted to study of the Trinity,
evidences the inauguration of new courses that are designed for persons
who want to train themselves in how to engage in explanatory theological
reflection. Most recently, a philosophy of science discussion seminar that
will develop a philosophy of science based on Lonergan's work was inaugurated
in the fall of 1997. Led by Dr. John Young and Dr. Ron Vardiman, it is
designed for scientists and non-scientists alike. Its organization meeting
on September 9 attracted 10 new students. This new group meets weekly on
Tuesday evenings at the abbey. In September 1998, an office and meeting
room opened in a section of St. Anselm's Abbey renovated for Institute
use, with the help of the monks and good friends, most especially: Abbot
Aidan Shea OSB, Brent Labatut (project designer), J. Michael Ballowe (project
builder), and Michael Kierzkowski (project architect).
With respect to the renovation
of assigned space on the ground floor of the old monastery, beginning late
in 1996, a series of steps were taken. Steel structural supports were installed
to reinforce the interior ceiling and damaged timbers were removed from
interior wall areas. The old partition separating the monastery's dark
room was replaced. Wagner Roofing removed the old slate tile roof that
had covered the area housing the rooms assigned for the Lonergan Institute
and placed a composite tile roof which resembles slate while avoiding its
high costs. Under J. Michael Ballowe of New Orleans (a skilled carpenter
and builder), between February 20-27, 1997, two rooms were constructed
and renovated to create space for an office and seminar room. Drywall was
placed over plywood to create new walls and ceilings which, then, was trimmed
with wood molding. Molding was also constructed to frame three adjoining
windows. Recessed lighting was installed in conjunction with two ceiling
fans. During the February 1997 construction, many persons generously offered
their help and encouragement: most particularly, Fr. Abbot Aidan, Fr. Christopher,
Fr. Dan, Fr. Abbot Alban, Fr. James, Fr. Hilary, Dr. Ron Vardiman, Tim
Argauer, Paul Edgeworth, Joe Bishop, Dr. Paul Long, Fr. Joseph Norton,
and Charles Little. Later, in June, through the generosity of Mr. Hans
Broekman, second master of St. Anselm's Abbey School, Blaise Mistzal gave
30 hours of gratuitous labor. After some sanding and scraping, the old
linoleum floor was removed in the conference room and all walls and ceilings
received a prime coat of paint. With Brent Labatut's help, some furniture
was selected for the Institute's rooms and four flower boxes with plants
were added to decorate the exterior. In August, Mr. Scott Sullivan put
in 18 hours of work to apply finishing touches to all surface areas. With
the installation by John Nichols of two wooden columns to encase two steel
upright beams in October 1997, almost everything was made ready for final
painting and carpeting.
On a second work visit, between
November 24-December 3, 1997 Michael Ballowe renovated a third room (presently
functioning as a foyer and antechamber) and, outside, he reconstructed
the approach to a door over which he built a wooden porch. Entry from the
outside will now be safer for anyone on foot. During the November-December
construction, the following persons freely gave their support and encouragement:
Fr. Abbot Aidan, Fr. Abbot Alban, Fr. Christopher, Fr. Dan, Robert Gumm,
Joseph Cilano, Joseph Careccio, and Charles Little. Scott Sullivan again
completed the interior work. Artist Barbara Lorei sketched five drawings
of an interior window that have been used to develop an icon to be used
on our Internet website and on printed materials. With the help of a good
friend, Mr. Joseph Careccio, our icon with name, place, telephone number,
and Internet address was placed on a production run of three dozen T-shirts
in order to raise funds and publicize the Institute's existence. These
T-shirts are currently available for $10 US not including costs for shipping
and handling. Through the generosity of Kathryn Barnard and Segundo Quinones,
carpeting was installed over all floor areas in July 1998, thus completing
the major work that preceded full occupancy. In September, a large conference
table and accompanying chairs was brought down from the unused novitiate
quarters in the attic. Pablo Cuzman helped move furniture. In November,
a new large attorney's bookcase was purchased. From Kitty Smith has come
new indoor and outdoor plants and some lamps, and, in December, from Ernest
and Suzanne Castilla, office and computer equipment. Noah Waldman helped
paint a fourth room and Eric Ortwerth, an adjacent bathroom. In April 1999,
Robert Beaumier restored a transom that had existed above the door leading
into the conference room.
A "gift nook" is currently
being established as a means to raise extra funds. Gift items have come
from Blanche Ballowe and Gregory Bingham (who has also donated a fine mantle
clock for the Institute conference room). In February 1999, Mike Ballowe
made a third visit and built a large wooden display case (assisted by Fr.
Chris, Fr. Dan, and Mr. Charles Little).
With respect to the work
of the Institute, David Fleischacker has begun to draft a workbook, or
commentary, constructed to help readers of Insight better understand what
is expected of them as willfully learning participants. A series of thought
experiments will supplement those already given in Insight in order to
foster changes in customary thinking processes that should lead to discoveries
revealing more rigorous methods and patterns of procedure. Dr. John Young
has drafted four papers to help Insight readers: "Physics as a Succession
of Higher Viewpoints Illustrating Classical Method," designed as a supplement
for chapter 2 of Insight; on statistical method, "Illustrating Statistical
Method and Physics as a Succession of Higher Viewpoints;" "Potency and
the Empirical Residue;" and "Are There Things Within Things?" Dr. Ron Vardiman
has produced two papers: on "Scientific Method" and "Conceptualism." Mr.
Michael Hernandez of St. Anselm's Abbey School has recently reviewed a
short paper by Br. Dunstan "2 as an irrational number" that is being prepared
as part of a series on the nature of inverse insight. A second paper on
non-countable multitudes is now being contemplated. Paul and Martha Edgeworth,
two of our Lonergan readers, have agreed to maintain our Lonergan Institute
web site on Internet, under David Fleischacker's direction.
In terms of corporate organization,
Phil Fiadino (formerly a member of the St. Anselm's School faculty) has
tentatively expressed interest in functioning as the Institute's fund raiser
and, to that end, with the help of friends with a knowledge about how to
form a nonprofit corporation (most especially: Michael and Françoise
Remington), we have worked to organize ourselves as a legally incorporated
501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Our corporate name has been registered
and reserved and articles of incorporation have been filed and certified;
bylaws were drafted and, on October 20, 1997, the IRS granted us tax exempt
status under section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code as an organization
described in section 501 (c) (3). Since August 1997, an Institute Internet
web site, initially hosted by the Thomist Press, has given users access
to information about Lonergan's analyses. The current address is www.lonergan.org.
In Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Peter Monette and Paul Allen, creators of the
Lonergan Web Site (www.lonergan.on.ca), have linked their web site to ours.
In Los Angelos, Mark Morelli has linked our home page and discussion forum
to the Los Angelos Lonergan Center Web Site which carries information on
the Lonergan Philosophical Society, the West Coast Methods Institute, and
Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies. Entries in the form of small papers
help readers deal with difficult aspects of Lonergan's book Insight while
a discussion forum provides a venue for questions and ideas on the points
of Lonergan's analysis. Since June 10, 1998, the Institute's web site has
received about 1400 visits. A unique feature is the availability of audio
lectures: Lonergan on Method in Theology, Fr. Joseph Flanagan on Insight,
and Patrick Byrne on Insight. Many responses have been coming from persons
living in Ireland and the United Kingdom. On December 13, 1997, the newly
formed Board of Directors met for the first time. Its initial members consist
of David Fleischacker, Br. Dunstan Robidoux, and Mark Rougeux. Bylaws were
approved and officers, elected: David Fleischacker as President, Christine
Fleischacker as Vice-President, and Br. Dunstan as both Secretary and Treasurer.
In March 1998, Fr. Joseph Norton agreed to sit on the Board as a new 4th
member.
In the end, however, despite
these activities and the involvement of a growing number of persons, much
depends on divine providence. Perhaps, in the long run, we will be able
to offer courses leading to some type of accreditation or degree program.
Perhaps, we will simply continue to offer, in an expanded form our presently
functioning reading and discussion programs that will help individuals
work through Insight (and some of Lonergan's other major writings) in conjunction
with some type of moral and even spiritual formation. Decisions about what
we are to do and become arise as developments take place on a day to day
basis,
At the present time, some
thought is also being given to how we can recruit persons who possess the
talents and interests suited for addressing the many challenges raised
by the questions pursued by the implementation of the Lonergan enterprise.
A training program would not only include studies in philosophy and theology
(which traditionally inform the core of Catholic higher education) but
some training: in mathematics and in the human and natural sciences would
also be necessary. if the meaning of Catholic life and faith profession
is to express itself in ways that could enable it to play a constitutive
role in the formation of contemporary modem culture. Physics, chemistry,
biology, and. sensitive psychology figure most prominently as subjects
which need to be adapted and used in intelligent presentations of Catholic
thought and wisdom. If some persons manifest an interest in living a monastic
life, they could be recommended as candidates to the abbey's Vocation Director
(Fr. John Farrelly OSB). On the other hand, if other participants pursue
or choose to pursue other ways of life, they could decide to engage in
the work of the Institute on the basis of other kinds of affiliation. Fellowship
as a Benedictine oblate presents one possible option which could be developed
in ways that could benefit the intellectual, moral, and spiritual lives
of members. The discussion and thought is ongoing, cumulative, and changing.
1. Collection,
ed. Frederick E. Crowe and Robert M. Doran, Collected Works of Bernard
Lonergan, vol. 4 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988), p. 245,
quoted in Michael McCarthy, "Towards a New Critical Center," Method: Journal
of Lonergan Studies 15 (1997): 111; partially quoted in John D. Dadosky,
"The Dialectic of Religious Identity: Lonergan and Balthazar," Theological
Studies 60 (1999): 42.
2. Terry
J. Tekippe, What Is Lonergan Up to in INSIGHT?: A Primer (Collegeville,
Minnesota, Liturgical Press,
1996), p. v; W. A. Stewart, Introduction to Lonergan's INSIGHT:
An Invitation to Philosophize
(Lewiston/Queenston/Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press, 1996), p. 1.
3. Paul
M. Rodden, "How I Came To Know Lonergan,,,," Lonergan Research Institute
Bulletin 12 (November 1997):
3.
4. Interview
with Fr. Joseph Flanagan, S.J., Boston College, June 1997, conducted by
Peter Monette and Paul Allen for Lonergan Web Site (www.lonergan.on.ca/flan.htm),
p. 3
5. 'Hugo
Anthony Meynell in his Introduction to the Philosophy of Bernard Lonergan
(London and Basingstoke: Macmillan Press Ltd, 1976), p. 1, summarizes the
subject matter of Insight as follows:
"Thoroughly understand
what it is to understand, and not only will you understand the broad lines
of all there is to be understood, but also you will possess a fixed base,
an invariant pattern, opening upon all further developments of understanding.'
Insight pursues this thesis through mathematics, empirical science, common
sense, depth psychology, and social theory, into metaphysics, hermeneutics,
ethics, and natural theology...study of the human understanding is the
way to determine the fundamental nature of the world revealed to that understanding...
6. While
David G. Creamer, in Guides for the Journey: John Macmurray, Bernard
Lonergan, James Fowler (Lanham,
Maryland: University Press of America, 1996), p. 54, describes Insight
as a philosophical classic that many speak about and some have read, fewer
have successfully understood the book. Time magazine, in an article dated
January 22, 1965, says that Lonergan's "dense, elliptical prose, studded
with references to Thomas Aquinas and modern physics, makes its points
in a methodical and mind-wearying manner. One typical passage hammers home
a conclusion with 'In the thirty-first place . . .'" However, since the
book's epilogue (p. 769) testifies to a paucity of "abundant quotations
from St. Thomas," the difficulties presented to readers by the subject
matter of Insight probably does not center on questions that focus on how
one best comes to an adequate understanding of Thomas Aquinas. For most
readers (if trained almost exclusively in the humanities or liberal arts),
the mathematics and the extensive discussion of problems directly related
to theoretical problems within physics present problems of comprehension
that border on the insuperable. To illustrate this point and Lonergan's
"blithe unconcern for the frailties of lesser intellects," Creamer cites
an amusing little story which reminisces about the difficulties faced by
many of Lonergan's students (in Rome) as they sought to understand what
their teacher was trying to communicate to them:
Once, after failing to get
a philosophical point across to his class, Lonergan brightened, said: "I
think this will make it clear," [and] proceeded to cover the blackboard
with differential equations.
7. Interview
with Kenneth R. Melchin, Saint Paul University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,
March 19, 1997, conducted by Paul Allen, Christine Jamieson, and Peter
Monette for Lonergan Web Site (www.lonergan.on.ca/melchin.htm), p. 11.
8. Interview
with Flanagan, p. 3. When reflecting on his many years of trying to introduce
students to the knowing of self envisaged by Lonergan's Insight, Flanagan
notes that, perhaps, the biggest problem is lack of familiarity with science,
physics and mathematics most especially.
My experience is that most
students when they have the chance, choose never to take a math course.
They may choose to take a science course, but it is usually not going to
be physics. It might be biology they will choose because it's not mathematical
the way in which physics and chemistry are.
9. author
of The Divine Initiative: Grace, World-Order, and Human Freedom in the
Early
Writings of Bernard Lonergan
(Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1995)
10. Certificate
of Incorporation issued on April 18, 1997 by the Department of Consumer
and Regulatory Affairs, District of Columbia
11. [Thomas
V. Moore], The Benedictine Foundation at the Catholic University of America
in Washington (Privately printed, [1923]), 3-4; Michael Hall OSB, "St.
Anselm's Abbey: a brief history," A Monk? ["a booklet... prepared for those
who may be interested in learning something of the meaning of monastic
life and in gaining an impression of how it is lived in one of the many
hundred monasteries throughout the world: St. Anselm's Abbey Washington,
D.C."] Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, n.d.; n.p.
12. [Moore],
7.
13. Thomas
V. Moore, John E. Haldi, William J. Flynn to Cuthbert Butler, Washington
D.C., [16 February 1922], Washington files, DAA, quoted in Benedict Neenan,
O.S.B., "The Life of Thomas Verner Moore: Psychiatrist, Educator and Monk"
(Ph.D. dissertation, Catholic University of America, 1996), p. 168.
14. Moore,
quoted in Neenan.
15. [Moore],
pp. 3-4.
16. We
are equating "science" with what Lonergan calls systematics, even though
one could define science in such a way that includes scholarly activities.
If one equates science with field, subject, and functional specialization,
then science includes scholarship. In general, "scholarship" is limited
to what Lonergan means by the functional specialties of research, interpretation,
and history. Therefore, in distinguishing science and scholarship, to be
complete we would need to add further clarifications in order to include
the functional specialities dialectic, foundations, doctrines, and communications,
lest we fall into the limits of "correlational" types of disciplines which
tend to give limited attention to many of the questions which critically
ground the links between the present, the past, and the future, or, to
use Lonergans terms, the "mediating" and "mediated" phases of functional
specialization.
17. Benedict
Neenan, O.S.B., "The Life of Thomas Verner Moore: Psychiatrist, Educator
and Monk," (Ph. D. dissertation, Catholic University of America, 1996),
179. Quoting Moore's own words (The Benedictine Foundation at the Catholic
University of America in Washington, 4):
The original group had in
mind an institute that would do something similar to what is being done
by the Rockefeller Institute of New York. The permanence of the institute
would, however be guaranteed, not be monetary endowment, but by the stability
of the monastic life.
Neenan describes the research
institutions that were founded in the early decades of the 20th
Century in America in the
following terms:
These institutes
were flush with philanthropists' money, and confident in the potential
of science to solve society's problems. The underlying assumption was that
a cadre of scientists, supported by an endowment and working cooperatively
on specific problems, could achieve far greater and swifter success than
scattered individuals.
18. Frederick
T. Gates [John D. Rockefeller's chief agent in founding the Rockefeller
Institute], quoted by Neenan, p. 180, quoting Theresa R. Richardson, The
Century of the Child: The Mental Hygiene Movement and Social Policy in
the United States and Canada (Albany: State University of New York Press,
1989), 34. Citing Richardson, in his dissertation, Neenan, on p. 180, notes
that Gates had "once described the [Rockefeller] institute as a 'theological
seminary,' not of the religion of the past, but of the religion of the
future." Hence, if, according to Neenan, the "zeal with which the research
movement approached its task of ridding the world of disease and social
disorder resembled a religious movement," and, if the Rockefeller Institute
and others like it can be described as scientific organizations motivated
by a religious spirit, St. Anselm's Abbey can be described in similar terms.
Primarily, it is a religious community, but its spirit is inspired by scientific
interests and activity. The charism of its apostolate centers on working
for explanations which can transform experiences of data into correlations
of verifiable explanatory meaning.
19. Bernard
Lonergan, For A New Political Economy, ed. Philip J. McShane (Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 1998), p. 36.
20. "Good
Under Construction" is borrowed from Flannery O'Connor's article entitled
"?????." An echo of it protrudes in Flannery's "A Memoir of Mary Ann,"
Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux,
1969), p. 226: "...in us the good is something under construction."
21. Bernard
Lonergan, Topics in Education: The Cincinnati Lectures of 1959 on the Philosophy
of Education, eds. Robert M. Doran and Frederick E. Crowe (Toronto: University
of Toronto Press, 1993), pp. 27-33; Terry J. Tekippe, "The Crisis of the
Human Good," Lonergan Workshop, vol. 7 (Atlanta, Georgia: Scholars Press,
1988), p. 314.
22. Plato
Symposium 201-4
23. Frederick
G. Lawrence, "The Human Good and Christian Conversation,"
Communication and Lonergan:
Common Ground and Forging the New Age, eds. Thomas J. Farrell & Paul
A. Soukup (Kansas City, Missouri: Sheed & Ward, 1993), p. 254.
24. Cicero
De re publica III, 31 cited by St. Augustine, The City of God II, 21. Another
translation from the Latin speaks of an "assemblage associated by a common
acknowledgment of law [i.e., an agreement about right or justice], and
by a community of interests (H. Deane, The Political and Social Ideas of
St. Augustine, p. 118). Cicero distinguishes, critically, between a society
which is a commonwealth and societies which are not. In a commonwealth,
the "weal or welfare of all persons" is the deciding factor and operative
goal for all the decisions which are made. Just, equitable relations govern
how human beings relate. Absence of justice changes a commonwealth into
a society which is a gang. A society no longer properly exists. It does
not truly or really exist.
25. Bernard
Lonergan, "The Subject," A Second Collection, eds. William F. J. Ryan,
S.J. and Bernard J. Tyrrell, S.J. (London: Darton, Longman & Todd,
1974), p. 81; Matthew L. Lamb, "The Social and Political Dimensions of
Lonergan's Theology," The Desires of the Human Heart: An Introduction to
the Theology of Bernard Lonergan, ed. Vernon Gregson (New York/Mahwah:
Paulist Press, 1988), p. 257.
26. Michael
Shute, "Economic Analysis Within Redemptive Praxis: An Achievement of Lonergan's
Third Decade," paper presented at the 24th annual Lonergan Workshop, Boston
College, Boston, Mass., 16 June 1997. p. 27.
27. Lonergan,
quoted in Lawrence, "Human Good and Christian Conversation," p. 251.
28. Bernard
Lonergan, Insight: A Study of Human Understanding, eds. Frederick E. Crowe
and Robert M. Doran (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1992), p. 253.
29. Patrick
H. Byrne, "The Fabric of Lonergan's Thought," Lonergan Workshop, vol. 2
(Chico, California: Scholars Press, 198 1), p. 80. As is, either one pays
a living or family wage and goes out of business or one starves one's workers
in order to remain in business.
30. Interview
with Melchin, p. 9.
31. Flanagan,
pp. 100-1.
32. Kenneth
R. Melchin, Living with Other People: An Introduction to Christian Ethics
Based on Bernard Lonergan (Toronto: Novalis, 1998), pp. 10-11.
33. Byrne,
p. 18, 78.
34. In
For a New Political Economy, pp. 20-1, cited by Shute, p. 21, in its unpublished
version (p. xx), Lonergan discusses this problem in the following terms:
Unity without freedom is
easy; set up a dictator and give him a secret police. Freedom without unity
is easy: let every weed glory in the sunshine of stupid adulation. But
unity and freedom together, that is the problem. It demands discipline
of mind and will; a keenness of apprehension that is not tied down to this
or that provincial routine of familiar ideas or the jelly-fish amorphism
of skepticism; a vitality of response to situations that can acknowledge
when the old game is done for, that can sacrifice the prerequisites of
past achievement, that can begin anew without bitterness, that can contribute
without anticipating dividends to self-love and self-aggrandizement.
35. frequently
cited as "economic equilibrium"
36. R.
Bruce Douglas, "At the Heart of the Letter," Commonweal, June 21, 1985
quoted in Byrne, p. 18.
37. Bernard
Lonergan, quoted in Lawrence, "Human Good and Christian Conversation,"
p. 251.
38. E.
J. Hannan, "Stationary Times Series," The New Palgrave: Time Series and
Statistics, eds. J. Eatwell and others (New York/London: Norton, 1990),
p. 27 1, cited by Peter Burley, "Lonergan, Economics, and Moral Theology,"
Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies 15 (1997): 51.
39. Shute,
p. 26.
40. John
Donne, Devotions [1624] XVII, quoted in John Bartlett, Familiar Quotations,
13 ed. (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1955), p. 218.
41. Shute,
pp. 20-22.
42. Bernard
Lonergan, Method in Theology, 2nd ed. (New York: Herder and Herder, 1973),
p. 38.
43. Bernard
Lonergan, "Analytic Conception of History," Method: A Journal of Lonergan
Studies 11: I (Spring 1993): 8, cited by Shute, p. 22.
44. Bernard
Lonergan, For a New Political Economy, pp. 11-2.
45. Lonergan,
"The Subject," A Second Collection, eds. William F. J. Ryan and Bernard
J. Tyrrell (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1974), p. 81; For a New
Political Economy, pp. 11-2.
46. Lonergan,
For a New Political Economy, p. 12.
47. Bernard
Lonergan, Caring About Meaning: patterns in the life of Bernard Lonergan,
eds. Pierrot Lambert, Charlotte Tansey, and Cathleen Going (Montreal: Thomas
More Institute, 1982), p. 225. In "Lonergan and Balthasar: Methodological
Considerations," Theological Studies 58: 1 (March 1997): 80, Robert Doran
comments on why a positive connection joins theology and economics:
. . . God wants
economic transactions to be just; but God has not revealed what constitutes
a just economy. Theology must be concerned with such an issue, and it must
show its concern not only by decrying injustice but also by proposing what
justice would be and by doing so at times in the most technical terms.
It is no accident that the theologian Lonergan returned late in life to
his early interest in macroeconomics; his efforts here were in effect his
attempt to spell out in extremely technical fashion in what consists, at
least in part, the economic integrity that as a theologian he believed
was God's will for human societies; and it seems to have been his intention
that these technical categories might someday be employed not only in a
scientific economic theory but also in a moral theology that would formulate
ethical positions on economic process.
48. Frederick
E. Crowe S.J., Appropriating the Lonergan Idea, ed. Michael Vertin, cited
by Hugo Meynell, "Enlightenment: Old and New," Lonergan Workshop, vol.
13: The Structure and Rhythms of Love: In Honor of Frederick Crowe, SJ
(Boston: Boston College, 1997), p. 127
.
49. Melchin,
Living with Other People, p. 107.
50. Interview
with Melchin, p. 4.
51. Flanagan,
p. 215.
52. Bernard
Lonergan, "Essay on Fundamental Sociology," p. 99 (transcript available
at the Boston College Lonergan Institute and at the Lonergan Research Institute
in Toronto) cited by Shute, p. 11.
53. Aristotle
Physica, I, 1, 184a 17
54. Bernard
Lonergan, "Healing and Creating in History," A Third Collection, ed. Frederick
E. Crowe (New York/London: Paulist Press/Geoffrey Chapman, 1985), p. 108.
55. Bernard
Lonergan, "An Interview with Fr. Bernard Lonergan, S.J.," A Second Collection,
eds. William F. J. Ryan, S.J. and Bernard J. Tyrrell, S.J. (London: Darton,
Longman & Todd, 1974), p. 221.
56. Nathan
Spielberg and Bryon D. Anderson, Seven Ideas that Shook the Universe (New
York: Stephen Kippur, 1987),
p. 15.
57. Flanagan,
p. 215.
58. Bernard
Lonergan, " Questions with Regard to Method: History and Economics," Dialogues
in Celebration, ed. Cathleen M. Going (Montreal: Thomas More Institute,
1980), pp. 295-6.
59. Lamb,
p. 263.
60. Tekippe,
"Human Good," Lonergan Workshop, vol. 7, p. 314.
61. Shute,
p. 18.
62. Lonergan,
For a New Political Economy, p. 12.
63. Bernard
Lonergan, Insight: A Study of Human Understanding, eds. Frederick E. Crowe
and Robert M. Doran, 2nd ed. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1992),
p. 416.
64. adumbrated
in Lonergan's Method in Theology where he discusses eight functional specialties
that, together, prescribe how a truly explanatory and scientific theology
is to be constructed: through an interactive combination of research, interpretation,
history, dialectics, foundations, doctrines, systematics/theory, and communications
65. defined
as the self-correcting process of learning and doing
66. the
Greek perfection or discovery of mind that began to move away from description
to-ward explanation (which experienced both an ancient and a modern revolution
67. the
appropriation or movement toward self-knowledge which focuses on the data
of human consciousness and its operations, and which begins to arise as
one attends to what exactly one does when one knows, acts, and loves. See
"interiority" in Carla Mae Streeter's "Glossary of Lonerganian Terminology,"
pp. 322-3, Communication and Lonergan: Common Ground and Forging the New
Age, eds. Thomas J. Farrell & Paul A. Soukup (Kansas City, Missouri:
Sheed & Ward, 1993).
68. I
went to the Jesuits -- there was really nothing exciting about that. I
went out to the Sault to make a retreat, an election, and I decided on
the street-car on the way out. (It was a two-hour trip on the tram.)" cited
from Caring About Meaning, p. 131.
69. David
G. Creamer, Guides for the Journey: John Macmurray, Bernard Lonergan, James
Fowler (Lanham, Maryland: University of America Press, 1996), p. 56.
70. Byrne,
pp. 20- 1.
71. Verbum:
Word and Idea in Aquinas 1946-49; Grace and Freedom: Operative Grace in
the Thought of Thomas Aquinas [a major revision of his dissertation] 1971;
and two studies of the Trinity and the Incarnation composed in Rome originally
for students: De Deo Trino 1964 and De Verbo Incamato 1961.
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