Important books come a long way, and Jean-Luc Marion's latest work is no exception.
The one who published some thirty essays, of which the penultimate,
Brève apologie pour un moment catholique,
in 2017, attracted media attention, is an author both prolific and discreet.
A renowned specialist in Descartes but also a sharp commentator on Saint Augustine, Husserl and Heidegger, he is known to be difficult.
He is, and his last essay, whose subtitle is titled
Contribution to a critical history and to a phenomenal concept of Revelation,
will discourage more than one.
The object of this book, which cost its author more than ten years of work, is both of great simplicity and infinite complexity.
Why do Christians persist in believing that a man-God they call Christ has changed the data of the human condition?
How can they justify their faith before the tribunal of reason?
And how can they think this salvation
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