Description
About the Author
Hak Joon Lee, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Ethics and Community at New Brunswick Theological Seminary. He has published articles in a variety of scholarly journals and is active in theological and philosophical academic associations.
Reviews
This important book is a gift to those who have sensed the potential of Jurgen Habermas's 'communicative ethics' for Christian thought. Hak Joon Lee explores the limitations of Habermas's theory, especially with its seemingly out-of-hand dismissal of religious insights ... [and] makes a persuasive case for an enriched 'Habermasianism'. . . incorporated into a larger framework that takes with utmost seriousness theological perspectives on covenant and the Trinity. -- Richard J. Mouw, Fuller Theological Seminary
Hak Joon Lee argues that Habermas's insights could help traditional covenantal theology to embrace the procedural theory of justice...[and in] turn could help the other side to appreciate the religious grounding and formative theological symbolic potentials so often neglected in modern philosophical and ethical thought. Since Habermas has recently begun to include religious traditions more thoroughly than before, the book comes at the right time and brings its own voice into the newly emerging discourse... -- Dr. Michael Welker, Heidelberg University
Dr. Lee is one of the intellectual leaders among that new generation of outstanding younger scholars who are taking up questions of 'Public Theology'. . . . [Covenant and Communication offers] a genuine communicative ethic that is more profound than the anti-cosmopolitan and anti-theological philosophers of our day or the theological dogmatists who would ignore philosophy and social theory. Altogether, this is a major intellectual and faithful achievement. -- Max L. Stackhouse, from the Foreword, Rimmer & Ruth DeVries Professor of Reformed Theology and Public Life, Princeton Theological Seminary
Book Information
ISBN 9780761833734
Author Hak Joon Lee
Format Paperback
Page Count 250
Imprint University Press of America
Publisher University Press of America
Weight(grams) 376g
Dimensions(mm) 227mm * 152mm * 19mm