Acknowledgments
Introduction: Catholics and Continental Thought: A Curious Allegiance
Stephanie Rumpza
1. The Reception of Phenomenology and Existentialism by American Catholic Philosophers: Some Facts and Some Reasons
Daniel Dahlstrom
2. Between the Old World and the New: Neoscholasticism, Continental Philosophy, and the Historical Subject
Gregory P. Floyd
3. Continental Philosophy and Hermeneutics: Between Religion and Secularity
John D. Caputo
4. Meaning, Concreteness, and Subjectivity: American Phenomenology and Catholic Philosophy at Boston College
Patrick Byrne
5. Catholicism and Continental Philosophy in French Canada: An Opening Followed by an Ungrateful Separation
Jean Grondin
6. French Phenomenology and Catholic Thought: Unfolding the Logos of the Logos
Christina M. Gschwandtner
7. The Use of Philosophy in Critical Catholic Theology
Andrew Prevot
8. Continental Philosophy as a Source for Theology: The Case of the “Science-Religion” Debate
Anne M. Carpenter
9. How Continental Philosophy of Religion Came into Being and Where It Is Going
Bruce Ellis Benson
10. Catholic Thought, French Phenomenology, and the University: Historical-Critical Remarks
Jeffrey Bloechl
11. Being True to Mystery and Metaxological Metaphysics
William Desmond
12. Catholic Thought and the Appropriation of Apocalyptic Forms of Philosophy in Alain Badiou, Slavoj Zizek, and Agamben
Cyril O’Regan