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Maurice Blondel: A Philosophical Life is unavailable, but you can change that!

French philosopher Maurice Blondel (1861–1949) had a tremendous impact on both philosophy and religion in the twentieth century. He was at once a postmodern critical philosopher and a devout traditional Catholic who strove to keep these two sides of his life in unison, neither separating nor confusing them. In this first-ever critical examination of Blondel’s entire life and work, Oliva...

but still without recognizing the reciprocal suspicion that existed among them. At this time Blondel saw Thomism as proposing only a juxtaposition of these three elements, a descriptive anatomy that found its persuasive force in the solidity and the amplitude of its exposition. But it did not meet the preoccupations of modern thought, which had been turned around by Kant’s Critique. Whatever Thomism was responding to in the thirteenth century was no longer the spirit or the approach of thoughtful
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