The Way Toward Wisdom: An Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Introduction to Metaphysics
University of Notre Dame Press, 2009.
by Benedict M. Ashley
Once thought to be the task of metaphysics, the synthesis of
knowledge has been discounted by many philosophers today. Benedict
Ashley, a leading Thomistic scholar, argues that it remains a valid and
intellectually fruitful pursuit by situating metaphysics as an endeavor
that must cross disciplinary and cultural boundaries.
Working
from a realist Thomistic epistemology, Ashley asserts that we must
begin our search for wisdom in the natural sciences; only then, he
believes, can we ensure that our claims about immaterial and invisible
things are rooted in reliable experience of the material. Any attempt
to share wisdom, he insists, must derive from a context that is both
interdisciplinary and intercultural.
Ashley offers an
ambitious analysis and synthesis of major historical contributions to
the unification of knowledge, including non-Western traditions.
Beginning with the question “Metaphysics: Nonsense or Wisdom?” Ashley
moves from a critical examination of the foundations of modern science
to quantum physics and the Big Bang; from Aristotle’s theory of being
and change, through Aquinas’s five ways, to a critical analysis of
modern and postmodern thought. Ashley is able to interweave the
approaches of the great philosophers by demonstrating their
contributions to philosophical thought in a concrete, specific manner.
In the process, he accounts for a contemporary culture overwhelmed by
the fragmentation of data and thirsting for an utterly transcendent yet
personal God.
Link to the publisher.