List of Abbreviations Chapter 1: Simplicity and Wisdom Chapter 2: The Simplicity of Discipleship Chapter 3: Interpreting the Simplicity of Discipleship Chapter 4: Simplicity and the Transcendental Attempt Chapter 5: The Actus Reflectus as Wisdom: Reconciling the Unreflective and Reflective in Act and Being Chapter 6: Towards Practical Discernment as Wisdom: Unreflective and Reflective Agency in Ethics Chapter 7: The ‘Transcendental Unity of Apperception’ and the ‘Categorical Imperative’ in the ‘Flow of Life’ Chapter 8: Articulating the ‘Original Togetherness’ of Life: Wilhelm Dilthey in Relation to Dietrich Bonhoeffer Chapter 9: The Unreflective ‘I’ and Reflective Self-Understanding in Dilthey Chapter 10: Unreflective and Reflective Agency in Dilthey Chapter 11: Gestalt: Aesthetics and Agency in Wilhelm Dilthey Chapter 12: Integrating Simplicity and Wisdom Bibliography Index
A critical study of a neglected aspect of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s theology: his writing on human subjectivity, self-reflection, and individual identity ‘in Christ’.
Jacob Phillips is Director of the Institute of Theology at St Mary's University, UK.
[What] Phillips has ultimately achieved is something of a tour de
force through Bonhoeffer’s thought ... [He] more than fulfils his
overall aim, to show how self-reflective wisdom can foster integral
aspects of simplicity and how simplicity can foster wisdom.
*Theology*
Phillips has written a highly perceptive book, arguing for a new
key to Bonhoeffer’s corpus, simplicity and wisdom. Drawing on
Dilthey to show how Bonhoeffer harmonises and integrates the
unreflective and reflective dimensions of our human subjectivity in
Christ, Phillips challenges us to appropriate boldly Bonhoeffer’s
vision of discipleship in wise and simple obedience to Christ.
*Christopher R.J. Holmes, Head of the Theology Programme,
University of Otago, New Zealand*
This rich and careful study provides a sustained engagement with a
central tension in Bonhoeffer’s theology: an emphasis upon
simplicity or unreflective obedience (especially as found in
Discipleship) and a recognition elsewhere of the role of wisdom,
discernment and responsibility (especially in Ethics). Displaying a
detailed grasp of Bonhoeffer’s corpus and philosophical influences,
Phillips’s book makes an important contribution to ongoing
scholarship and debates.
*Michael Mawson, Senior Lecturer in Theology, Charles Sturt
University, Australia*
Jacob Phillips’ text takes up an important project in Bonhoeffer
scholarship, addressing contradictions between Discipleship and
Ethics vis-à-vis unreflective and reflective obedience to God.
Pairing close readings of Bonhoeffer’s work with hermeneutical
insight from Immanuel Kant and Wilhelm Dilthey, Phillips arrives at
a constructive integration of those contradictions. Moreover, he
places his work in conversation with the varied scholarly reception
of Discipleship and Bonhoeffer’s own cautionary words about the
‘dangers’ of his earlier work. I highly recommend this book for
serious students of Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s life and legacy.
*Lori Brandt Hale, Professor of Religion, Augsburg University, USA*
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