Reflections on the Project of a Renewed Polis: After Athens and Jerusalem

Thesis Eleven 102 (1):6-23 (2010)
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Abstract

This article discusses the historical opposition in the Western world between Athens as the centre of democratic political thinking, reason and philosophical knowledge and Jerusalem as the centre of religion, faith and revelation. It examines the historical trajectory of the debate from early Christianity to this day with special emphasis on the work of Leo Strauss and Eric Voegelin; it addresses the relation between faith and reason as two existential and political principles reinforcing each other and explores the symbiotic relationship existing today after both symbolic landscapes have been replaced by new patterns of social organization. It suggests that we must recast the duality Athens/ Jerusalem, not as terms of antagonism, but as two complementary dimensions of existence and orders of experience. It proposes that the event of human natality belongs to the religious order while that of human conscience belongs to the political order. It concludes that modern complex trans-national societies must absorb the experience of both traditions and articulate a new conceptual framework about the relationship between faith and reason

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Vrasidas Karalis
University of Sydney

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The Greeks and the Irrational.E. R. Dodds - 1951 - Philosophy 28 (105):176-177.
Politics.H. Aristotle & Rackham - 1944 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by H. Rackham.

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