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E-raamat: Beyond the Walls: Abraham Joshua Heschel and Edith Stein on the Significance of Empathy for Jewish-Christian Dialogue [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Inaugural Rev Michael Hurley SJ post-doctoral research and teaching fellow, Irish School of Economics, Trinity College, Dublin)
  • Formaat: 208 pages
  • Sari: AAR Academy Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Oct-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199925025
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 208 pages
  • Sari: AAR Academy Series
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Oct-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199925025
Joseph Palmisano explores the interreligious significance of empathy for Jewish-Christian understanding. Drawing on the writings of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel (1907-1972) and Edith Stein (1891-1942), he develops a phenomenological category of empathy defined as a way of ''re-membering'' oneself with the religious other.

Palmisano follows Heschel's and Stein's personal and spiritual journeys through the darkest years of Nazi Germany. He shows that Heschel's call to Christian interlocutors for a return to God is an ecumenical call to humanity to embrace perceived others: a call to live life as a response to God's pathos. This call finds a prophetic answer in Edith Stein's witness of empathy with regard to the Holocaust. Stein, a Catholic, creates a dialectical bridge with the Jewish 'other,' neither distancing herself nor denying her Jewish roots. Stein's simultaneously Jewish and Christian fidelity is a model for interreligious relations. It is also a challenge to Catholics to remember their religion's Jewish heritage through new categories of witnessing and belonging with others.

Beyond the Walls is a critical contribution to the fostering of interreligious understanding, offering both a model of the ideal Jewish-Christian relationship in Heschel and Stein and criteria with which to evaluate contemporary initiatives and controversies concerning interreligious dialogue.
Acknowledgments vii
Abbreviations ix
Introduction 3(6)
1 Towards Pathos: Preliminary Considerations
9(18)
The Projected Other and the Prophetic Mystical Option
10(2)
Prophetico-Mystical Dialogue: The Disclosure of the Divine
12(3)
Towards a Widening of Concern: The Context for Divine Pathos
15(1)
The Prophet's Theodicy: A "Robust" and Dialogical Relationship Between God and the Prophet(s)
16(3)
The Meaning of This Hour/Versuch einer Deutung
19(5)
Consenting to Love
24(3)
2 Towards a Hermeneutics of Empathy: Mystery, Being, Subjectivity
27(16)
Not Being but The Mystery of Being
28(1)
Rahner's Vorgriff: "Experiencing" the Ineffable
29(4)
God the Subject, Man the Object
33(3)
Reprise: A Levinasian Echo in Heschel?
36(7)
3 Pathos and Sympathy
43(18)
The Personalism of Pathos
44(3)
Sympathetic Solidarity
47(2)
Towards a Contemporary Prophetic Witness: Sympathy as Surrender?
49(2)
Ways to Know God: Partnering with God and the World
51(2)
Sympathy Shaping Pathos: Beyond Surrender through Mutuality
53(2)
Neither Self-Abnegation nor Self-Infatuation: Mutuality
55(1)
Empathy: "Real Love is Creative of Distinction"
56(1)
`Con-primordiality': The Non-Dissolution of The "I"
57(4)
4 On Empathy
61(20)
Beginnings of Einfuhlung: Life in a Jewish Family, The Lazaretto
63(4)
The Givenness of Einfuhlung
67(1)
Einfuhlung as Con-primordial: Dyadic
68(2)
Empathy's Dyadic Structure
70(1)
Heschel on Empathy
71(1)
Empathy's Dialogical Structure: Trans-subjectivity's Reprise
72(4)
Empathy's Intention: The Rehumanization of the Other
76(5)
5 A Finite and Eternal Being: Conversion and Carmel
81(20)
Reinach's Personalism: a New Horizon
81(4)
Stein on Woman: A Comprehensive Sympathy
85(2)
Behind the Walls of Carmel: Kenotic Fragments of a Wider, Pathic Concern
87(1)
"If The Silence Continues": Edith Stein's 1933 Letter to Pope Pius XI
88(4)
Humani Generis Unitas and Finite and Eternal Being: A Hermeneutic of Contrast
92(2)
The Unity and Plurality of Social Life: The Positive Anthropology of Humani Generis Unitas
94(2)
Stein's Hermeneutic: "I Am Who I Am"---God's Being-in-Persons
96(5)
6 Beyond the Walls of Carmel
101(20)
A Christology of Anti-Sacrifice: Empathy's Kenosis Towards a Renewed Jewish-Catholic Solidarity
105(3)
The "Science" of Kenosis: Stein's Phenomenological Christology
108(2)
Towards a "Crucified" Mindfulness
110(2)
"Like a Fire Burning": A Habitus-for-Loving
112(1)
Remembering the Woundedness of the World
113(1)
Beyond the Walls of Carmel
114(7)
7 Stein's Kenosis: Reimaging Witnessing
121(28)
The Kenosis of Caritas
122(4)
Embodying Empathy: A Wider Relationality
126(1)
A Metaphor for Stein: The "Mandorla" Witness
127(2)
The smar in Martyr: Witnessing as Remembering
129(2)
Heschel's Empathic Reprise for Christianity: Kavanah
131(18)
Towards a Conclusion: Empathic Witnessing as Interreligious Dialogue
139(10)
Notes 149(28)
Index 177
Inaugural Rev Michael Hurley SJ post-doctoral research and teaching fellow, Irish School of Economics, Trinity College, Dublin