Man and God

By (author) Xavier Zubiri Edited by Thomas Fowler, Nelson Orringer Translated by Joaquín Redondo

Paperback - £50.00

Publication date:

29 July 2009

Length of book:

322 pages

Publisher

UPA

ISBN-13: 9780761847021

Man and God is the first of three major works by Xavier Zubiri (1898-1983) on the subject of theology. All three books are posthumous publications, based on lectures given by Zubiri, a famous contemporary Spanish philosopher. Man and God is divided into three parts; the first part serving as an essential introduction to the core of the work. This section, together with the introductions by translators Joaquín Redondo and Dr. Thomas B. Fowler provide the reader with the necessary preparation to enjoy the philosophical riches of this book. Here, Zubiri suggests that God is transcendent in all things; therefore, by experiencing the world man has the fundamental experience of God.

Translators Redondo, Fowler, and Dr. Nelson Orringer have sought to render the original text into natural and readable English while maintaining fidelity to the original work. This translation is the product of three experts in the thought of Zubiri, with the final revision given here collaboration between Dr. Fowler and Dr. Orringer.

This translation was made possible by a grant from the Spanish Ministry of Culture.
Man and God (El hombre y Dios) is the book upon which Xavier Zubiri was working when he died on September 21st, 1983. Fortunately, he left it almost complete, and that is the reason why the present text constitutes a systematic work and not a miscellany of fragments or essays. It is the first of his theology trilogy, the next two volumes of which are El problema filosófico de la historia de las religiones (The Philosophical Problem of the History of Religions), and Cristianismo (Christianity). Man and God has a profound relation of homogeneity with other books published by Zubiri: Sobre la esencia [English translation, On Essence, 1980], and the trilogy Inteligencia y Realidad , Inteligencia y Logos , and Inteligencia y Razón which together comprise Zubiri's major work, Inteligencia Sentiente [English translation, Sentient Intelligence, 1999]. In these works Zubiri sought to overcome the centuries-old conceptualism and idealism of Metaphysics (On Essence) and the Theory of Knowledge (Sentient Intelligence) though a new, unified vision of them capable of resolving the myriad problems accumulated over two and half millennia of intellectual effort. In Man and God Zubiri propo