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Keywords = Jean-Louis Chrétien

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17 pages, 273 KiB  
Article
Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
by Roy Peachey
Religions 2025, 16(5), 642; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050642 - 19 May 2025
Viewed by 290
Abstract
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le [...] Read more.
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le dernier dimanche, Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome, and Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais. It argues that some of the most pressing questions of our secular age—including questions of intersubjectivity and human and divine absence—are addressed in these competing narratives of secularization. It then examines Jean-Louis Chrétien’s notion of cardiognosie, or knowledge of the heart, and his argument that profanation, rather than secularization as such, is of central importance in the modern novel’s construction of meaning before concluding with a close reading of Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome and a consideration of the heart in Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais as a first step toward establishing the means by which profanation has been faced and overcome in recent fictional texts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Catholic Theologies of Culture)
18 pages, 321 KiB  
Article
The Phenomenological and the Symbolical in Richir’s “Quasi-Theology”
by Dominic Nnaemeka Ekweariri
Religions 2023, 14(7), 874; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14070874 - 4 Jul 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2051
Abstract
If a new generation of phenomenologists (Emmanuel Levinas, Michel Henry, Jean-Luc Marion, Jean-Louis Chrétien, Jean-François Courtine) in France sought to overcome the “methodic atheism” imposed on the phenomenological method by the fathers of phenomenology, it was at the price of going beyond experience [...] Read more.
If a new generation of phenomenologists (Emmanuel Levinas, Michel Henry, Jean-Luc Marion, Jean-Louis Chrétien, Jean-François Courtine) in France sought to overcome the “methodic atheism” imposed on the phenomenological method by the fathers of phenomenology, it was at the price of going beyond experience immanent to existence which targeted the invisible, and therefore of lacking a discourse on the critical restriction of the phenomenological method and on the points of contact between phenomenology and theology. The task of this paper is to show how this lack is overcome by Marc Richir’s “quasi theology” viewed from his articulation of the relationship between the phenomenological and the symbolical. This paper argues that whereas for the new French phenomenologists it is usually a question of a subreptitious crossing from one discipline to another, in Richir, what we have is an enigmatic relationship of the overlap between phenomenology and the symbolical. While Richir was only interested in the articulation of the relationship between the phenomenological, the symbolical and the absolute transcendence, his thoughts motivate us to explore, following Emmanuel Falque’s approach, the reciprocal transformation between phenomenology and theology. The paper concludes, on the one hand, that experience remains the immanent ground for phenomenology and theological science and, on the other, that Richir’s approach could be understood as a “metaphysical phenomenology”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Phenomenology and Systematic Theology)
12 pages, 2502 KiB  
Article
Beneficial Effects of Zoledronic Acid on Tendons of the Osteogenesis Imperfecta Mouse (Oim)
by Antoine Chretien, Guillaume Mabilleau, Jean Lebacq, Pierre-Louis Docquier and Catherine Behets
Pharmaceuticals 2023, 16(6), 832; https://doi.org/10.3390/ph16060832 - 2 Jun 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2239
Abstract
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a genetic disorder of connective tissue characterized by spontaneous fractures, bone deformities, impaired growth and posture, as well as extra-skeletal manifestations. Recent studies have underlined an impairment of the osteotendinous complex in mice models of OI. The first objective [...] Read more.
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a genetic disorder of connective tissue characterized by spontaneous fractures, bone deformities, impaired growth and posture, as well as extra-skeletal manifestations. Recent studies have underlined an impairment of the osteotendinous complex in mice models of OI. The first objective of the present work was to further investigate the properties of tendons in the osteogenesis imperfecta mouse (oim), a model characterized by a mutation in the COL1A2 gene. The second objective was to identify the possible beneficial effects of zoledronic acid on tendons. Oim received a single intravenous injection of zoledronic acid (ZA group) at 5 weeks and were euthanized at 14 weeks. Their tendons were compared with those of untreated oim (oim group) and control mice (WT group) by histology, mechanical tests, western blotting and Raman spectroscopy. The ulnar epiphysis had a significantly lower relative bone surface (BV/TV) in oim than WT mice. The tendon of the triceps brachii was also significantly less birefringent and displayed numerous chondrocytes aligned along the fibers. ZA mice showed an increase in BV/TV of the ulnar epiphysis and in tendon birefringence. The tendon of the flexor digitorum longus was significantly less viscous in oim than WT mice; in ZA-treated mice, there was an improvement of viscoelastic properties, especially in the toe region of stress-strain curve, which corresponds to collagen crimp. The tendons of both oim and ZA groups did not show any significant change in the expression of decorin or tenomodulin. Finally, Raman spectroscopy highlighted differences in material properties between ZA and WT tendons. There was also a significant increase in the rate of hydroxyproline in the tendons of ZA mice compared with oim ones. This study highlighted changes in matrix organization and an alteration of mechanical properties in oim tendons; zoledronic acid treatment had beneficial effects on these parameters. In the future, it will be interesting to better understand the underlying mechanisms which are possibly linked to a greater solicitation of the musculoskeletal system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Osteogenesis Imperfecta—Current and Future Therapies)
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15 pages, 278 KiB  
Article
Beyond the Phenomenology of the Inconspicuous
by Carla Canullo
Religions 2021, 12(8), 558; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080558 - 21 Jul 2021
Viewed by 3145
Abstract
How does spirit appear? In fact, it does not appear, and for this reason, we could refer to it, following Heidegger, as “inconspicuous” (unscheinbar). The Heideggerian path investigates this inconspicuous starting from the Husserlian method, and yet, this is not the [...] Read more.
How does spirit appear? In fact, it does not appear, and for this reason, we could refer to it, following Heidegger, as “inconspicuous” (unscheinbar). The Heideggerian path investigates this inconspicuous starting from the Husserlian method, and yet, this is not the only Phenomenology of the “Inconspicuous” Spirit: Hegel had already thematized it in 1807. It is thus possible to identify at least two Phenomenologies of the “Inconspicuous” spirit. These two phenomenologies, however, do not simply put forth distinct phenomenological methods, nor do they merely propose differing modes of spirit’s manifestation. In each of these phenomenologies, rather, what we call “spirit” manifests different traits: in one instance, it appears as absolute knowing, and, in the other, it manifests “from itself” as “phenomenon”. Yet how, exactly, does spirit manifest “starting from itself as phenomenon”? Certainly not in the mode of entities, but rather in the modality that historical phenomenology, which also includes Edmund Husserl’s work, has grasped. A question remains, however: is the inconspicuous coextensive with “spirit”? Certainly, spirit is inconspicuous, but it is not only spirit that is such. A certain phenomenological practice understood this well, a practice that several French authors have pushed. Jean-Luc Marion, Michel Henry, and Jean-Louis Chrétien have all contributed, in a certain way, to the phenomenology of the inconspicuous. However, do these authors carry out a phenomenology of inconspicuous spirit? Perhaps what French phenomenology gives us today, after an itinerary that has discovered several senses of the inconspicuous, is precisely the return to spirit that is missing in, and was missed by, this tradition. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Phenomenology, Spirituality, and Religion)
9 pages, 265 KiB  
Article
Human Spirituality: Jean-Louis Chrétien and the Vital Side of Speech
by Francesca Peruzzotti
Religions 2021, 12(7), 511; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070511 - 8 Jul 2021
Viewed by 3354
Abstract
Jean-Louis Chrétien founded his phenomenological enquiry on an analysis of the word as defined by the call and response link. His analysis provides an in-depth approach to spiritual experience as a basis for authentic religious experience. The description of the theoretical sites in [...] Read more.
Jean-Louis Chrétien founded his phenomenological enquiry on an analysis of the word as defined by the call and response link. His analysis provides an in-depth approach to spiritual experience as a basis for authentic religious experience. The description of the theoretical sites in which he confronts the theme of the spirit (vital breath, Holy Spirit, inspiration of Scripture, and spiritual life and prayer) determines some fixed points that allow us to define spiritual experience as intersubjective and fleshly, and therefore, not reducible to solipsism and intimism. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Phenomenology, Spirituality, and Religion)
16 pages, 263 KiB  
Article
Recovering World-Welcoming Words: Language, Metaphysics, and the Voice of Nature
by Valentin Gerlier
Religions 2021, 12(7), 501; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070501 - 5 Jul 2021
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2285
Abstract
This article presents a theological–literary response to a concern in contemporary theory with heeding and articulating the speech of nonhuman things. Drawing from Rowan Williams’ metaphysics of poetic addition, I argue that an ‘ecotheological’ literary practice challenges us to become attentive and responsive [...] Read more.
This article presents a theological–literary response to a concern in contemporary theory with heeding and articulating the speech of nonhuman things. Drawing from Rowan Williams’ metaphysics of poetic addition, I argue that an ‘ecotheological’ literary practice challenges us to become attentive and responsive to the language of the nonhuman, by creatively performing the co-mingling of nonhuman and human language. Drawing from Jean-Louis Chrétien’s phenomenology of the voice, I propose a theological conception of language as a gift of hospitality to the voice of nonhuman things that is also a gift of poetic addition—a ‘saying more’ which, adding being to the world, also manifests its gift-like nature. In contrast to recent critical approaches, I argue for the qualified retrieval of ‘nature’ as a figure both literary and theological, a voice that gives voice to things and speaks by means of human literary production. Through a reading of Shakespeare’s King Lear, I show that the paradoxical and poetic ambiguities of the literary sense of ‘nature’ serve precisely to shed light on its suspect modern iteration, while at the same time taking us beyond critique to enable a cautious yet attentive retrieval of its poetic and symbolic scope. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Literature and Eco-theology)
16 pages, 501 KiB  
Article
Faith and Forgetfulness: Homo Religiosus, Jean-Louis Chrétien, and Heidegger
by Jason W. Alvis
Religions 2019, 10(4), 264; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10040264 - 12 Apr 2019
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3861
Abstract
Religion often is conceived as the sine qua non of the human, thus imbedding religious activity implicitly even within our cosmopolitical globalization processes and secular political concepts. This depiction of the human as ever-religious raises a host of concerns: Does it justify that [...] Read more.
Religion often is conceived as the sine qua non of the human, thus imbedding religious activity implicitly even within our cosmopolitical globalization processes and secular political concepts. This depiction of the human as ever-religious raises a host of concerns: Does it justify that we can believe ourselves to hold a religious identity without any existential choice or faith? Would it entail the presumption of God’s existence, thus possibly leading to God’s becoming a banal Faktum that inhibits the subject from being able to disavow God or not believe? And finally, how is it possible to relate authentically/existentially with our religious life without disregarding this quality of religion as always already operative? In order to provide more specificity to this latter question in particular, this paper focuses on an essential aspect of homo religiosus: faith. Focusing principally upon Heidegger and Jean-Louis Chrétien, this paper develops three ways “forgetfulness” is indispensable to faith; or in another sense, how faith itself also operates in, and is acheived through implicit ways. Indeed, if forgetting is essential to faith, and faith is essential to homo religiosus, then “forgetting” also to some degree is essential to religious life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion and Transformation in Contemporary World)
15 pages, 228 KiB  
Article
Living Joyfully after Losing Social Hope: Kierkegaard and Chrétien on Selfhood and Eschatological Expectation
by J. Aaron Simmons
Religions 2017, 8(3), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8030033 - 24 Feb 2017
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 6026
Abstract
In this essay, I offer an existential-phenomenological consideration of what it might look like to live joyfully after losing social hope. Using the example of the widespread hopelessness that many are feeling in light of the election of Donald Trump, I suggest that [...] Read more.
In this essay, I offer an existential-phenomenological consideration of what it might look like to live joyfully after losing social hope. Using the example of the widespread hopelessness that many are feeling in light of the election of Donald Trump, I suggest that the danger of losing hope is that we can also lose our selfhood in the process. In order to develop a conception of “eschatological hope” that would be resistant to the loss of such social and political expectations, I draw specifically on Søren Kierkegaard’s notion that “the expectancy of faith is victory,” and Jean-Louis Chrétien’s idea of “the unhoped for,” in order to develop a model of hope that remains when it seems like all other hope has been lost. Rather than being overcome by anxiety about the future, eschatological hope fosters joy in the present. Full article
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