No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Theology and Reason
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
Extract
I had anticipated learning from the contributions of others to the debate initiated last autumn in New Blackfriars by Professor Nicholas Lash and me (the debate on what has been called ‘the liberal consensus’) without reentering that debate soon, if ever. The scrupulous courtesy of Fr. Timothy Radcliffe’s article in the March issue, in which he discusses whether there is such a ‘consensus’ among Catholic biblical scholars, makes it easy to do that. However, I have found it impossible to let the remarks of Mr. Joseph Fitzpatrick in his March article, based on the views of Bernard Lonergan, pass without protest.
Mr. Fitzpatrick’s article appears to me to encourage hostility to reason itself. He does not openly declare himself an enemy to reason, and I have no doubt would sincerely repudiate such a charge: but, all the same, what he wrote will surely reinforce hostility to it on the part of others. A large part of his contention is that, in theology, and, by implication, in other disciplines as well, deductive reasoning should be demoted. Anyone who puts forward such a thesis needs to spell out with great care exactly what he means by it if he is not to be taken, or mistaken, for an enemy of reason; and Mr. Fitzpatrick exercises very little care. He objects to ‘the habit among Catholic theologians of arriving at conclusions by often dubious deductive reasoning’ (p. 134). We have here, at the outset of his attack on the use of deductive reasoning in theology, a vital ambiguity.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1988 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 Dummett, Michael, ‘A Remarkable Consensus’, New Blackfriars Vol. 68 No. 809 (October 1987), pp. 424–431CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
Lash, Nicholas, ‘A Leaky Sort of Thing? The divisiveness of Michael Dummett’, Vol 68 No. 811 (December 1987), pp. 552–557Google Scholar.
Michael Dummett, ‘Unsafe Premises: a reply to Nicholas Lash’, ibid. pp. 558–566.
2 Radcliffe, Timothy OP, ‘Interrogating the Consensus: a response to Michael Dummett’, Vol 69 No. 814 (1988), pp. 116–126Google Scholar.
3 Joseph Fitzpatrick, ‘Lonergan's Method and the Dummett‐Lash Dispute’, ibid. 126–138.
4 Vol. 68 No. 811 (December 1987), p. 560.
5 ibid. pp. 560, 564.
Editor: We will be publishing a short response from Mr. Joseph Fitzpatrick in our June issue.