<p>"The book edited by Jim Kanaris consists of twelve essays. All of these are trying to embody philosophy of religion in their own way This diverse and multi-color approach has an enticing effect, since it signals the intention to break beyond traditional boundaries, shunning any 'déjà vu'." — <i>Philosophia</i></p><p>"Insofar as the future puts the present under critique by welcoming in anticipation what is avenir (to come), few aspire to be the first to the future and thereby inaugurate in the present 'a time out of joint,' as Raschke phrases it à la Derrida and Hamlet. The notable contributors of this volume, insightfully brought together by Kanaris, have braved just that." — <i>Arc</i> (The Journal of the School of Religious Studies, McGill University)</p><p>"'A Possible Future' is a modest subtitle for this collection. We are in fact offered multiple options for proceeding in the philosophy of religion. The current period is one of intense self-questioning among academics working in this area, regarding the state of the field and how it might be augmented or transformed without undermining its existing strengths. This volume usefully gives voice to a concinnity of 'reconfigurations' that, in their diversity, contribute provocatively to the debate." — <i>Reading Religion</i></p><p>"This gathering of important voices and the differences of approach and opinion that they represent invites/provokes reflection, self-examination by philosophers of religion, and further work." — Jeffrey Dudiak, author of <i>The Intrigue of Ethics: A Reading of the Idea of Discourse in the Thought of Emmanuel Levinas</i></p>
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Jim Kanaris is CAS Assistant Professor of Philosophy of Religion at McGill University. He is the author of Bernard Lonergan's Philosophy of Religion: From Philosophy of God to Philosophy of Religious Studies and the coeditor (with Mark J. Doorley) of In Deference to the Other: Lonergan and Contemporary Continental Thought, both also published by SUNY Press.