Lexington Books / Fortress Academic
Pages: 312
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-9787-1002-3 • Hardback • February 2021 • $122.00 • (£94.00)
978-1-9787-1003-0 • eBook • February 2021 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Rory Misiewicz (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) teaches humane letters at Philadelphia Classical School (PA).
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 1 Requirements for a Successful Analogy
Chapter 2 How Analogy Works: Intelligibility, Modeling, and Guidelines
Part 2 Influential Positions on Theological Analogy and their Inadequacies
Chapter 3 Analogia Entis
Chapter 4 Grammatical Thomism and Analogy
Chapter 5 Analogia Fidei
Part 3 The Peircean Alternative for Theological Analogy
Chapter 6 Peirce’s Philosophy and Intelligibility
Chapter 7 Analogia Signorum
Rory Misiewicz has produced a fine comparison of traditional models of theological analogy and his Peirce-inspired analogy of signs. This is first-rate Peirce scholarship and adds to our growing knowledge of Peirce’s later work. It takes a worthy place among scholarship sponsored by Short’s Peirce’s Theory of Signs. It is especially good in explicating Peirce’s strange, conservative, view of God.
— Robert Cummings Neville, Boston University, emeritus
The goal of this important new book is to explain how talk about God can be defended as intelligible. Misiewicz supplies an extraordinarily detailed critique of various theological attempts to articulate a theory of analogy, followed by his own constructive proposal rooted in insights borrowed from Charles Peirce’s philosophy. Readers unfamiliar with Peirce will discover in the book’s sixth chapter a remarkably clear summary of his thought. The final chapter displays great creativity, employing Peirce’s semiotic in the process of developing a fresh approach to Christology. This is an impressive book by a young scholar with mature insights.
— Michael L. Raposa, Lehigh University
Why do recent students of theology shy away from philosophic discipline and formal logic? Is it because matters of faith and tradition no longer appear intelligible? Or because conventional modern logic fails to measure the intelligibility of God talk? Here is a bold and effective cure: analogia signorum! Rory Misiewicz teaches his readers how to enlist the semiotic logic of Charles Sanders Peirce as a powerful instrument for diagramming and evaluating the intelligibility of religious discourse. His teaching offers students of theology strong reasons to trust philosophic rigor, once again, and in a more than modern way.
— Peter Ochs, University of Virginia