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Tables of Contents for Re-Defining Community
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Introduction
9
1
Community Today: Searching for a New Meaning
9
4
Chapter One
13
20
Exploring Perspectives in Community
13
20
Community: Sample Definitions
13
1
Analysing some of the Characteristic Features of Community
14
1
Comparing Perspectives
15
2
Re-appreciating the Characteristic Features
17
6
Community: The Complexity of a Concept
23
2
Community Contra Society: an Insinuated Divorce
25
3
Overstepping the Dichotomy
28
3
Defining our Goal at this Point
31
2
Chapter Two
33
84
Community Models: A Trinitarian Tradition
33
84
Why Trinity?
36
1
Fidelity to a Tradition
37
2
Previewing the Models on Matters that Unite and Separate Their Exponents
39
7
The Collectivist Paradigm
46
1
The Geme Gemeinschaft: as the Collectivist Paradigm in Toennies
47
10
Mechanical Solidarity: Durkheim's Picture of the Collectivist Model
57
6
Socialism: Pesch's Version of the Collectivist Typology
63
8
The Autonomist Paradigm
71
2
The Gesellschaft: the Autonomist Paradigm in Toennies
73
4
Decoding the Autonomist in Durkheim's Organic Solidarity
77
1
The Pathological Outbursts of Organic Solidarity
78
4
The Social-Network of Organic Solidarity
82
5
Individualism: The Autonomist Paradigm in Pesch
87
3
Particular and General Interests
90
3
The Social Limits of Freedom and Property
93
3
The Integral-Intentional or Personalist Paradigm
96
4
Smatterings of the Personalist Way of Thinking
100
2
The Integral-Intentional Model in Peschian Solidarism
102
7
Solidarism on the Market Square
109
2
Solidarism on the Level of International Relations
111
2
Considering Some Advantages of the Peschian Solidarity
113
4
Chapter Three
117
64
The Person as Metaphor and Matrix for Community
117
64
Coursing the Polarity of a Concept
118
6
Some Genetic Considerations of the Concept of the Person
124
1
Select Antecedent Perspectives on the Person
125
8
Thomas Aquinas: Insight into a Classical Vision of the Person
133
4
A Personalist Legacy
137
2
The Person as Relational Being
139
5
On Being an Individual and a Person
144
5
Human Subjectivity Entails a Conditioned Freedom
149
3
Elaborations on the Personalism of Gaudium et spes
152
2
Subjectivity
154
2
Embodiment
156
3
Being-in-the-world
159
3
Intentionality
162
3
Socialisation
165
3
Historicity
168
3
Fundamentally equal yet original
171
4
Religion or Communion with God
175
3
The Trinity
178
3
Chapter Four
181
48
The Personalist ``Saga'': Where Does Hauerwas Stand?
181
48
The Communitarian Controversy
181
2
The Quality-Sanctity of Life Controversy
183
3
An Ambiguous Position
186
8
All Humans are Potentially Persons
194
2
Controversy Over Rights Language
196
6
The Person: The Socially Implicated Agent-Self
202
1
Moral Considerations on Agency
203
4
Character-Virtue: Elements in the Social Discourse of the Agent-Self
207
6
Face to Face with Personalist Conceptual Patterns
213
1
Mutual Relationality of the Self and the ``Other''
213
3
Uniqueness, Commonality and the Limits of the Universal
216
3
Creative Autonomy and the Human Predicament
219
2
Freedom and Social Responsibility
221
3
Equality and Justice
224
2
The Spirituality of the Person
226
3
Conclusion
229
2
Bibliography
231
16
Index
247