STANFORD
UNIVERSITY PRESS
  



Revelation Comes from Elsewhere
Jean-Luc Marion, Translated by Stephen E. Lewis and Stephanie Rumpza

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Contents
Translators' Note
Introduction by Stephanie Rumpza
Foreword
Part I
Envoy
1The Privilege of a Question
2The Privilege of a Notion: Revelation
Part II: The Constitution of the Aporia
3Thomas Aquinas and the Epistemological Interpretation
4Suarez and the Sufficiency of the Proposition
5The Magisterium's Reserve
6The Metaphysical Origin of the Common Concept of Revelation
Part III: The Restitution of a Theological Concept
7The Possibilities and the Aporias of a Theological Concept of Revelation
8Unconcealment or Uncovering
9Ista revelatio, ipsa est attractio
10The Other Logic and Its Determinations
Part IV: Christ as Phenomenon
11Nobody's Manifestation
12What the "Mystery" Uncovers (Paul)
13Parable and Confession (the Synoptics)
14The "Mystery"—of Whom? (John)
Part V: The Icon of the Invisible
15Monotheism and Trinity: An Ontic Model
16Immanence and Economy: A Historical Model
17The Trinity as Icon: A Phenomenal Model
18The Trinity as the Phenomenality of the Gift
Part VI: The Opening
19Being, Uncovered from Elsewhere
20Time, Uncovered from Elsewhere
Notes
Index