Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1992-01-01
Publisher(s): Univ of Toronto Pr
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Summary

Insight is Bernard Lonergan's masterwork. It aim is nothing less than insight into insight itself, a comprehensive view of knowledge and understanding, and to state what one needs to understand and how one proceeds to understand it. In Lonergan's own words: 'Thoroughly understand what it is to understand, and not only will you understand the broad lines of all there is to be understood but also you will possess a fixed base, and invariant pattern, opening upon all further developments of understanding.' The editors of the Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan have established the definitive text for Insight after examining all the variant forms in Lonergan's manuscripts and papers. The volume includes introductory material and annotation to enable the reader to appreciate more fully this challenging work. Bernard Lonergan (1904-1984), a professor of theology, taught at Regis College, Harvard University, and Boston College. An established author known for his Insightand Method in Theology, Lonergan received numerous honorary doctorates, was a Companion of the Order of Canada in 1971 and was named as an original members of the International Theological Commission by Pope Paul VI.

Author Biography

Frederick E. Crowe is a co-founder of the Lonergan Research Institute and a professor emeritus at the Toronto School of Theology, University of Toronto. Robert M. Doran is the director of the Lonergan Research Institute and a professor at Regis College, University of Toronto.

Table of Contents

Editors' Preface xv
Frontispiece xxvii
Preface 3(8)
Introduction 11(16)
PART ONE: INSIGHT AS ACTIVITY
Elements
27(30)
A Dramatic Instance
27(4)
Definition
31(6)
The Clue
31(1)
Concepts
32(1)
The Image
33(1)
The Question
33(1)
Genesis
34(1)
Nominal and Explanatory Definition
35(1)
Primitive Terms
36(1)
Implicit Definition
37(1)
Higher Viewpoints
37(6)
Positive Integers
38(1)
Addition Tables
39(1)
The Homogeneous Expansion
39(1)
The Need of a Higher Viewpoint
40(1)
Formulation of the Higher Viewpoint
40(1)
Successive Higher Viewpoints
41(1)
The Significance of Symbolism
42(1)
Inverse Insight
43(7)
The Empirical Residue
50(7)
Heuristic Structures of Empirical Method
57(36)
Mathematical and Scientific Insights Compared
57(3)
Similarities
57(1)
Dissimilarities
58(2)
Classical Heuristic Structures
60(10)
An Illustration from Algebra
60(1)
`Nature'
60(1)
Classification and Correlation
61(1)
Differential Equations
62(2)
Invariance
64(3)
Summary
67(3)
Concrete Inferences from Classical Laws
70(6)
Statistical Heuristic Structures
76(15)
Elementary Contrasts
76(2)
The Inverse Insight
78(3)
The Meaning of Probability
81(4)
Analogy in Heuristic Structure
85(4)
Some Further Questions
89(2)
Survey
91(2)
The Canons of Empirical Method
93(33)
The Canon of Selection
94(3)
The Restriction to Sensible Data
95(1)
What Are Sensible Data?
96(1)
The Canon of Operations
97(2)
The Canon of Relevance
99(3)
The Canon of Parsimony
102(5)
Classical Laws
102(3)
Statistical Laws
105(2)
The Canon of Complete Explanation
107(2)
The Canon of Statistical Residues
109(17)
The General Argument
109(2)
The Notion of Abstraction
111(1)
The Abstractness of Classical Laws
112(2)
Systematic Unification and Imaginative Synthesis
114(3)
The Existence of Statistical Residues
117(1)
Classical Laws Conditional
117(1)
The Diverging Series of Conditions
118(1)
The Nonsystematic Aggregate of Diverging Series
119(2)
The General Character of Statistical Theories
121(1)
Events
121(1)
Not Processes
121(1)
Observable Events
121(1)
Foundations
122(1)
Use of Classical Concepts
122(1)
Images and Parsimony
123(1)
A Principle of Uncertainty
123(1)
Indeterminancy and the Nonsystematic
124(2)
The Complementarity of Classical and Stastical Investigations
126(37)
Complementarity in the Knowing
128(10)
Complementary Heuristic Structures
128(1)
Complementary Procedures
129(2)
Complementary Formulations
131(2)
Complementary Modes of Abstraction
133(1)
Complementarity in Verification
134(1)
Complementarity in Data Explained
135(2)
Summary
137(1)
Complementarity in the Known
138(13)
General Characteristics of the View
139(2)
Schemes of Recurrence
141(2)
The Probability of Schemes
143(1)
Emergent Probability
144(4)
Consequences of Emergent Probability
148(3)
Clarification by Contrast
151(10)
The Aristotelian World View
151(1)
The Galilean World View
152(2)
The Darwinian World View
154(3)
Indeterminism
157(4)
Conclusion
161(2)
Space and Time
163(33)
The Problem Peculiar to Physics
163(2)
Invariant and Relative Expressions
163(1)
Their Ground in Abstraction
164(1)
Abstraction in Physics
165(1)
The Description of Space and Time
165(7)
Extensions and Durations
166(1)
Descriptive Definitions
166(1)
Frames of Reference
167(1)
Transformations
168(1)
Generalized Geometry
169(2)
A Logical Note
171(1)
The Abstract Intelligibility of Space and Time
172(12)
The Theorem
173(2)
Euclidean Geometry
175(1)
Absolute Space
176(3)
Simultaneity
179(2)
Motion and Time
181(2)
The Principle at Issue
183(1)
Rods and Clocks
184(10)
The Elementary Paradox
185(3)
The Generic Notion of Measurement
188(3)
Differentiations of the Generic Notion of Measurement
191(3)
The Concrete Intelligibility of Space and Time
194(2)
Common Sense and Its Subject
196(36)
Common Sense as Intellectual
196(8)
The Subjective Field of Common Sense
204(28)
Patterns of Experience
204(1)
The Biological Pattern of Experience
205(2)
The Aesthetic Pattern of Experience
207(2)
The Intellectual Pattern of Experience
209(1)
The Dramatic Pattern of Experience
210(2)
Elements in the Dramatic Subject
212(2)
Dramatic Bias
214(1)
Scotosis
215(1)
Repression
215(1)
Inhibition
216(1)
Performance
217(3)
A Common Problem
220(3)
A Piece of Evidence
223(4)
A Note on Method
227(5)
Common Sense as Object
232(38)
Practical Common Sense
232(2)
The Dynamic Structure
234(3)
Intersubjectivity and Social Order
237(2)
The Tension of Community
239(3)
The Dialectic of Community
242(2)
Individual Bias
244(3)
Group Bias
247(3)
General Bias
250(17)
The Longer Cycle
251(3)
Implications of the Longer Cycle
254(3)
Alternatives of the Longer Cycle
257(2)
Reversal of the Longer Cycle
259(2)
Culture and Reversal
261(2)
Cosmopolis
263(4)
Conclusion
267(3)
Things
270(26)
The General Notion of the Thing
270(5)
Bodies
275(5)
Genus as Explanatory
280(3)
Things within Things
283(1)
Things and Emergent Probability
284(3)
Species as Explanatory
287(5)
Concluding Summary
292(4)
The Notion of Judgment
296(8)
Reflective Understanding
304(39)
The General Form of Reflective Insight
305(1)
Concrete Judgments of Fact
306(2)
Insights into Concrete Situations
308(4)
Concrete Analogies and Generalizations
312(2)
Commonsense Judgments
314(10)
The Source of Commonsense Judgments
314(2)
The Object of Commonsense Judgments
316(2)
Commonsense Judgment and Empirical Science
318(6)
Probable Judgments
324(5)
Analytic Propositions and Principles
329(5)
Mathematical Judgments
334(5)
Summary
339(4)
PART TWO: INSIGHT AS KNOWLEDGE
Self-affirmation of the Knower
343(29)
The Notion of Consciousness
344(2)
Empirical, Intelligent, and Rational Consciousness
346(3)
The Unity of Consciousness
349(1)
The Unity as Given
350(2)
Self-affirmation
352(1)
Self-affirmation as Immanent Law
353(4)
Description and Explanation
357(2)
The Impossibility of Revision
359(1)
Self-affirmation in the Possibility of Judgments of Fact
360(2)
Contrast with Kantian Analysis
362(4)
Contrast with Relativist Analysis
366(6)
The Notion of Being
372(27)
A Definition
372(3)
An Unrestricted Notion
375(2)
A Spontaneous Notion
377(3)
An All-pervasive Notion
380(1)
The Core of Meaning
381(2)
A Puzzling Notion
383(5)
Theories of the Notion of Being
388(11)
The Notion of Objectivity
399(11)
The Principal Notion
399(3)
Absolute Objectivity
402(2)
Normative Objectivity
404(1)
Experiential Objectivity
405(2)
Characteristics of the Notion
407(3)
The Method of Metaphysics
410(46)
The Underlying Problem
410(5)
A Definition of Metaphysics
415(6)
Method in Metaphysics
421(5)
The Dialectic of Method in Metaphysics
426(30)
Deductive Methods
427(6)
Universal Doubt
433(4)
Empiricism
437(4)
Commonsense Eclecticism
441(5)
Hegelian Dialectic
446(2)
Scientific Method and Philosophy
448(8)
Elements of Metaphysics
456(56)
Potency, Form, and Act
456(4)
Central and Conjugate Forms
460(3)
Explanatory Genera and Species
463(4)
Potency and Limitation
467(3)
Potency and Finality
470(6)
The Notion of Development
476(8)
Genetic Method
484(23)
General Notions
484(4)
Organic Development
488(4)
Psychic and Intellectual Development
492(2)
Human Development
494(10)
Counterpositions
504(3)
Summary
507(5)
Metaphysics as Science
512(41)
Distinctions
513(1)
Relations
514(7)
The Meaning of the Metaphysical Elements
521(12)
What Are the Metaphysical Elements?
521(1)
Cognitional or Ontological Elements?
522(4)
The Nature of Metaphysical Equivalence
526(4)
The Significance of Metaphysical Equivalence
530(3)
The Unity of Proportionate Being
533(11)
The Unity of the Proportionate Universe
533(1)
The Unity of a Concrete Being
534(4)
The Unity of Man
538(5)
Summary
543(1)
Metaphysics as Science
544(9)
Metaphysics as Dialectic
553(65)
Metaphysics, Mystery, and Myth
554(18)
The Sense of the Unknown
555(3)
The Genesis of Adequate Self-knowledge
558(2)
Mythic Consciousness
560(6)
Myth and Metaphysics
566(1)
Myth and Allegory
567(2)
The Notion of Mystery
569(3)
The Notion of Truth
572(13)
The Criterion of Truth
573(2)
The Definition of Truth
575(1)
The Ontological Aspect of Truth
575(1)
Truth and Expression
576(5)
The Appropriation of Truth
581(4)
The Truth of Interpretation
585(33)
The Problem
585(2)
The Notion of a Universal Viewpoint
587(5)
Levels and Sequences of Expression
592(3)
Limitations of the Treatise
595(5)
Interpretation and Method
600(2)
The Sketch
602(1)
Counterpositions
603(5)
Some Canons for a Methodical Hermeneutics
608(8)
Conclusion
616(2)
The Possibility of Ethics
618(39)
The Notion of the Good
619(12)
Levels of the Good
619(2)
The Notion of Will
621(3)
The Notion of Value
624(2)
The Method of Ethics
626(2)
The Ontology of the Good
628(3)
The Notion of Freedom
631(12)
The Significance of Statistical Residues
631(1)
The Underlying Sensitive Flow
632(1)
The Practical Insight
632(1)
Practical Reflection
633(3)
The Decision
636(3)
Freedom
639(4)
The Problem of Liberation
643(14)
Essential and Effective Freedom
643(2)
Conditions of Effective Freedom
645(2)
Possible Functions of Satire and Humor
647(3)
Moral Impotence
650(3)
The Problem of Liberation
653(4)
General Transcendent Knowledge
657(52)
The Notion of Transcendence
657(2)
The Immanent Source of Transcendence
659(3)
The Notion of Transcendent Knowledge
662(2)
Preliminaries to Conceiving the Transcendent Idea
664(3)
The Idea of Being
667(2)
The Primary Component in the Idea of Being
669(3)
The Secondary Component in the Idea of Being
672(2)
Causality
674(6)
The Notion of God
680(12)
The Affirmation of God
692(7)
Comparisons and Contrasts
699(10)
Special Transcendent Knowledge
709(44)
The Problem
710(5)
The Existence of a Solution
715(3)
The Heuristic Structure of the Solution
718(7)
The Notion of Belief
725(15)
The General Context of Belief
725(3)
The Analysis of Belief
728(7)
The Critique of Beliefs
735(4)
A Logical Note
739(1)
Resumption of the Heuristic Structure of the Solution
740(10)
The Identification of the Solution
750(3)
Epilogue 753(18)
Lexicon of Latin and Greek Words and Phrases 771(4)
Editorial Notes 775(34)
Works of Lonergan Referred to in Editors' Preface and Editorial Notes 809(2)
Lonergan's Lectures on Insight 811(2)
Index 813

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