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2017-02-24
Regis College, Toronto
A collaborative, international research conference.

Available contributions from this conference are audio recordings by Greg Lauzon of the following lectures:

Anne Carpenter, Let this Mind be in You: Christological Reflections on Sacred Tradition

Ryan Hemmer, Cathedrals of the Mind: Tradition, Plurality, and the Renewal of the Speculative Form

Matthew Thollander, Intelligible Abundance: Rowan Williams and Bernard Lonergan on Natural Theology

Robert Van Alstyne, The Same as Person: The Divine Essence as Personal Communion in St. Thomas and Ferdinand Ulrich

Joshua Harris, Neither Solitary Nor Diverse: Transcendental Multiplicity in Aquinas’ Trinitarian Theology

Justin Schwartz, Moving Forward by Looking Back: Lonergan’s Influences for Adoption of the Great Commission

Robyn Boere, Can We Change Nature? A Study of Eberl, McKenny, and Peterson on the Question of Altering Human Nature

Susan Gray, The Intersection of Lonergan and Feminist Theologies

Benjamin Hohman, Gender and Metaphysics

Kate McCray, Shared Will, Shared Virtue: Rediscovering Distributed Agency and the Christian Responsibility of Support

Nicholas Olkovich, Rethinking the Politics-Religion Distinction

Jonathan Heaps, Medieval and Modern Cooperation on the Ambiguities of Being

Brian Bajzek, Being-in-Love is Being-for-the-Other

Andrew Vink, Weeping at the Foot of the Cross: Social Suffering, Despair, and Hope

Christopher Taucar, The Value of Health and Healing in the Sacramental Nature of Christ

Peter Santandreu, Considering the Contemporary Potential of Baptismal Character

Elisabeth Nicholson, The Significance of Bernard Lonergan’s Notion of Conscious Intentionality for a Theology of the Incarnate Word - Ongoing Research

Justin Rowan, The Incarnation and Incarnate Meaning: Lonergan and Girard in Conversation on Christ

Murray Johnston, A Question of Redemption: Towards a Theology of Inter-Religious Dialogue

Mark Yenson, Is There Such a Thing as Pure Chalcedonianism?

Contributor Title
Anne Carpenter Let this Mind be in You: Christological Reflections on Sacred Tradition
Ryan Hemmer Cathedrals of the Mind: Tradition, Plurality, and the Renewal of the Speculative Form
Matthew Thollander Intelligible Abundance: Rowan Williams and Bernard Lonergan on Natural Theology
Robert Van Alstyne The Same as Person: The Divine Essence as Personal Communion in St. Thomas and Ferdinand Ulrich
Joshua Harris Neither Solitary Nor Diverse: Transcendental Multiplicity in Aquinas’ Trinitarian Theology
Justin Schwartz Moving Forward by Looking Back: Lonergan’s Influences for Adoption of the Great Commission
Robyn Boere Can We Change Nature? A Study of Eberl, McKenny, and Peterson on the Question of Altering Human Nature
Susan Gray The Intersection of Lonergan and Feminist Theologies
Benjamin Hohman Gender and Metaphysics
Kate McCray Shared Will, Shared Virtue: Rediscovering Distributed Agency and the Christian Responsibility of Support
Nicholas Olkovich Rethinking the Politics-Religion Distinction
Jonathan Heaps Medieval and Modern Cooperation on the Ambiguities of Being
Brian Bajzek Being-in-Love is Being-for-the-Other
Andrew Vink Weeping at the Foot of the Cross: Social Suffering, Despair, and Hope
Christopher Taucar The Value of Health and Healing in the Sacramental Nature of Christ
Peter Santandreu Considering the Contemporary Potential of Baptismal Character
Elisabeth Nicholson The Significance of Bernard Lonergan’s Notion of Conscious Intentionality for a Theology of the Incarnate Word - Ongoing Research
Justin Rowan The Incarnation and Incarnate Meaning: Lonergan and Girard in Conversation on Christ
Murray Johnston A Question of Redemption: Towards a Theology of Inter-Religious Dialogue
Mark Yenson Is There Such a Thing as Pure Chalcedonianism?