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Full Description
Collects the essays of James Bradley (1947 2012) for the first time, showcasing his speculative cosmology of the Trinity 
Reinvigorates the debate about the role and significance of speculative philosophy in the Anglo-American tradition
Reveals the depth and breadth of Bradley's philosophical thought
Presented in chronological order, following the movement of Bradley's thought
Includes a preface by Peter Harris and a contextualising introduction by Sean McGrath
This collection of essays by James Bradley presents his unique vision: a speculative cosmology of the Trinity, drawing on the vast history of Western philosophy. This journey led him into an intensive study of a number of different thinkers, ancient and modern, including Plato, John Scotus Eriugena, Duns Scotus, Hegel, Schelling, Peirce, Whitehead and Collingwood.
James Bradley was Professor of Philosophy at Memorial University, Newfoundland from 1988 to 2012. His work was a lifelong examination of themes in speculative metaphysics within a broad historical context. Throughout these investigations, Bradley remained focussed on a single project: the elaboration of the triadic structure of speculative logic, expressed in both Christian theology and more metaphysical terms. Bradley was convinced that he had discovered the key to ontology and the history of philosophy, theology and science in the logic of the Trinity.
Contents
Preface; Creative Order: James Bradley's Speculative Metaphysics, Peter Harris; Acknowledgments; Introduction: James Bradley's Path to the Trinity, Sean J. McGrath; 1. F. H. Bradley's Metaphysics of Feeling and its Place in the History of Philosophy; 2. Whitehead, Heidegger and the Paradoxes of the New; 3. From Presence to Process: Bradley and Whitehead; 4. The Speculative Generalization of the Function: A Key to Whitehead; 5. Triads, Trinities, and Rationality; 6. The Triune Event: Event Ontology, Reason, and Love; 7. What is Existence?; 8. Beyond Hermeneutics: Peirce's Semiology as a Trinitarian Metaphysics of Communication; 9. A Key to Collingwood's Metaphysics of Absolute Presuppositions: The Trinitarian Creed; 10. Philosophy and Trinity; Postscript: My Friend James Bradley, Helmut Maassen.

              

