A genuine problem is subject to an appropriate technique by the exercise of which it is defined; whereas a mystery, by definition, transcends every conceivable technique. It is, no doubt, always possible (logically and psychologically) to degrade a mystery... The Mystery of the Child - Page 17by Martin E. Marty - 2007 - 257 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Ellen Pifer - Literary Criticism - 1991 - 228 pages
...the promise of solution if the proper data and methods of analysis are applied. As Marcel points out. "a genuine problem is subject to an appropriate technique...defined: whereas a mystery. by definition. transcends even conceivable technique. It is. no doubt. always possible tlogically and psychologicallyl to degrade... | |
| John Cottingham - Philosophy - 2005 - 202 pages
...language, its character of being linguistically overburdened.' Turner, The Darkness of God, p. zo. A genuine problem is subject to an appropriate technique...perhaps be discovered in a kind of corruption of the intelligence.*4 In confronting the raw enigma of our human existence, the riddle of the cosmos and... | |
| Aloysius Rego - Catholic Church - 2006 - 390 pages
...distinction between what is in me and what is before me loses its meaning and its initial validity. A genuine problem is subject to an appropriate technique...definition, transcends every conceivable technique" (Gabriel Marcel, Being and Having, trans. Katharine Farrer [Westminster: Dacre Press, 1949] 1 17).... | |
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