Everything about Bernard Lonergan totally explained
Fr. Bernard Lonergan, S.J. (
17 December 1904 –
26 November 1984) was a
Canadian Jesuit Priest. He was a
philosopher-
theologian in the
Thomist tradition and an
economist from
Buckingham, Quebec. He taught at
Loyola College (Montreal) (now
Concordia University),
Regis College (now part of the
University of Toronto), the
Pontifical Gregorian University and
Boston College. He is the author of
Insight: A Study of Human Understanding
(
1957) and
Method in Theology
(
1973), which established what he called the Generalized Empirical Method (GEM). The University of Toronto Press is in process of publishing his work in a projected 20-volume collection assembled by staff at the Lonergan Research Institute at
Regis College.
Education
Lonergan entered the
Society of Jesus in
1922, obtained his BA in Philosophy from
Heythrop College in
1929, was ordained a
Roman Catholic Priest in
1933, obtained his S.T.D. (
Doctor of Sacred Theology) from the
Pontifical Gregorian University in
1940 for a dissertation advised by Charles Boyer, S.J., and later published as
Grace and Freedom: Operative Grace in the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas
.
Works
After his return from
Rome, Lonergan wrote a series of four articles for
Theological Studies on the inner word in
Thomas Aquinas which became highly influential in the study of St. Thomas' accounts of
knowledge and
cognition. The articles were later collected and published under the title
Verbum: Word and Idea in Aquinas
.
While teaching
theology at the Collegium Christi Regis, now
Regis College federated with the
University of Toronto, Lonergan wrote
Insight: A Study of Human Understanding, inaugurating the generalized
empirical method (GEM). GEM belongs to the movement of "transcendental Thomism" inaugurated by
Joseph Maréchal. This method begins with an analysis of human knowing as divided into three levels—experience, understanding, and judgment—and, by stressing the objectivity of judgment more than
Kant had done, develops a Thomistic vision of
Being as the goal of the dynamic openness of the human spirit.
In 1973, Lonergan published
Method in Theology
, which divides the discipline into eight 'functional specialties'. Method is a phenomenon which applies across the board in all disciplines and realms of consciousness. Through his work on method, Lonergan aimed, among other things, to establish a firm basis for agreement and progress in disciplines such as
philosophy and
theology. Lonergan believed that the lack of an agreed method among scholars in such fields has inhibited substantive agreement from being reached and progress from being made; whereas, in the natural sciences, for example, widespread agreement among scholars on the
scientific method has enabled remarkable progress.
In later life while teaching at
Boston College, Lonergan returned his attention to the economic interests of his younger days. The University of Toronto Press has published his two works on economcs:
For a New Political Economy and
Macroeconomic Dynamics: An Essay in Circulation Analysis.
For more information, see a
complete bibliography
of Lonergan's works; view Lonergan's works
now in print
; or make contact with one of the centers of Lonergan studies, such as the
Lonergan Institute for "the Good Under Construction" or the
Lonergan Center.
Philosophy: Generalized Empirical Method (GEM)
Lonergan described GEM as
critical realism. By realism, he affirmed that we make true judgments of fact and of value, and by critical, he based knowing and valuing in a critique of
consciousness. GEM traces to their roots in consciousness the sources of all the meanings and values that make up personality, social orders, and historical developments. A more thorough overview of Lonergan's work is available at the
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
.
His ideas include
Radical Unintelligibility and
GEM.
Honours
In
1970 he was made a Companion of the
Order of Canada.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Bernard Lonergan'.
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