Review of Spiritual Traditions and the Virtues, by Mark R. Wynn [Book Review]

European Journal for Philosophy of Religion (forthcoming)
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Abstract

This perceptive and engaging work proposes a new approach to philosophical theology. Rather than beginning with the metaphysics or epistemology of religion, Wynn proposes to begin with the nature of spiritual goods and the ways in which they are pursued, understood, and handed on within spiritual traditions. Wynn advances his discussion while relying heavily on Aquinas’s Thomistic notion of infused virtue. The result is a fresh take on the “hybrid” nature of spiritual goods, which order human beings to both God and the world. There are certainly some serious objections to the positions offered in this book, but the proposals are consistently insightful and interesting. In this review, I will focus on two key spiritual goods discussed by Wynn: (i) spiritual progress and (ii) faith.

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Aesthetic experience and spiritual well-being: locating the role of theological commitments.Mark Wynn - 2018 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 79 (4):397-409.
Renewing the senses: conversion experience and the phenomenology of the spiritual life. [REVIEW]Mark Wynn - 2012 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 72 (3):211-226.

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Author Profiles

Donald Bungum
Oxford University
Donald Bungum
University of Mary

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