The Legacy of the Tubingen School: The Relevance of Nineteenth-Century Theology for the Twenty-First Century

The Legacy of the Tubingen School: The Relevance of Nineteenth-Century Theology for the Twenty-First Century

Role

Co-editors: Donald J. Dietrich, Michael J. Himes

Contributing author: John E. Thiel

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Document Type

Book Contribution

Description/Summary

John Thiel is a contributing author, "The Universal in the Particular: Johann Sebastian Drey on the Hermeneutics of Tradition," Chapter 3, pp. 56-74.

The Catholic Tubingen school was the most creative and influential movement within Catholic theology in the 19th century. The first generation of theologians who worked within its tradition- especially Drey, Mohler, and Kuhn, entered into serious conversation with the major currents of post-Kantian philosophy and gave Catholic thought a new direction which has continued to influence theology in the decades since. This volume introduces readers to several main themes in the enduring influence of the Tubingen school.

ISBN

9780824517007

Publication Date

1997

Publication Information

Thiel, John E. “The Universal in the Particular: Johann Sebastian Drey on the Hermeneutics of Tradition,” in The Legacy of the Tübingen School: The Relevance of Nineteenth-Century Theology for the Twenty-First Century. Ed. Donald Dietrich and Michael Himes. New York: Crossroad Publishing, 1998, 56-74.

Comments

Copyright 1997 The Crossroad Publishing Company

The Legacy of the Tubingen School: The Relevance of Nineteenth-Century Theology for the Twenty-First Century

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