Politics, Peace and Predestination
Auteur
Hollingworth, Miles
Contributor(s)
Dupont, Anthony (editor)
Eguiarte Bendímez, Enrique (editor)
Alberto Villabona Vargas, Carlos (editor)
Language
EnglishRésumé
This chapter is intended to show that Augustine’s political philosophy can speak with a radical voice into situations of extreme ideological conflict today—most especially where these involve gross disparities of wealth. The key to allowing this radical Augustinian voice to speak, is first to spend a good deal of time identifying the exact coordinates into which it can speak. These coordinates may surprise us, and they are the chief innovation of this chapter. For convenience sake, I lever the search for these coordinates against the general idea of radical socialism, understood as a philosophy of history. The result of this approach is that it eventually brings us out on Augustine’s doctrine of predestination; and allows us to begin to see it as the practical touchstone of a new radical Augustinianism. This new radicalism does not need to make use of the device that liberation theology made use of, viz., a preferential option for the poor. Instead, it moves beyond all such class distinctions to direct itself against the very dynamics which have shaped political logic in the West since Plato.
Keywords
Marxism-Leninism; Plato; predestination; rationality; utopianismWebshop link
https://editorial.uniagustinia ...ISBN
9789585498211Publisher
Editorial UniagustinianaPublisher website
editorial.uniagustiniana.edu.co/index.php/editorialPublication date and place
2019Classification
Christian theology
History of Western philosophy
Marxism & Communism