1st Edition

The Nature of the Soul The Soul as Narrative

By Terrance W. Klein Copyright 2012
    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book offers a contemporary Christian explication of the word 'soul' that uses Wittgenstein and his interpreters to suggest that human intelligence and desire cannot be 'mapped into the world' that is described by science and metaphysics. It examines the Aristotelian notion of the soul as one who acts in the world, and suggests that we construct ourselves, our narratives, by our actions in history. Drawing upon the resurrection accounts of the gospels, where Jesus is presented as having been 'translated into the liturgy' it speculates that the core of the human person, his or her intelligence, can be translated into other material mediums, all the while maintaining personal identity. Reading Aquinas according to the insights of contemporary figures in Anglo-American philosophy of language, Klein argues that, ultimately, to be a soul is to be a narrative destined for Christic incorporation into the Book of Life spoken of in Revelation.

    Chapter 1 What a Piece of Work is Man; Chapter 2 Mapping the World; Chapter 3 Too Too Sullied Flesh; Chapter 4 A Narrative of Desire: Hebraic Usage; Chapter 5 Plato Summons the Soul; Chapter 6 Aristotle’s Actor; Chapter 7 Aquinas; Chapter 8 A New Name and a New Future; Chapter 9 Shuffled Off This Mortal Coil;

    Biography

    Terrance Klein holds a doctorate in fundamental theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome, writing under Archbishop Rino Fisichella, auxiliary bishop of Rome and President of the newly formed Pontifical Council for the New Evangelization. Klein was an associate professor of theology at Fordham University, 2006-2010, and is now a visiting professor of religious studies at Fairfield University. He is the former chair of the Karl Rahner Society of America and is the author of two scholarly monographs: How Things Are in the World: Metaphysics and Theology in Wittgenstein and Rahner (Marquette University Press, 2003) and Wittgenstein and the Metaphysics of Grace (Oxford, 2007) as well as a popular work in spirituality Vanity Faith: Searching for Spirituality with the Stars (Liturgical Press, 2009).

    'This is an outstanding work of sophisticated theology that seeks to understand resurrection anew. One may quibble with Klein's interpretations of various thinkers but the book's argument is both innovative and compelling.' Religious Studies Review