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The Metaphysics of Trust

Credit and Faith III

Philip Goodchild

Following Credit and Faith and Economic Theology, this third volume in the series develops a metaphysics which is missing when trust is ordered around economic theories and institutions. Human existence may be conceived according to its temporal dimensions of appropriation, participation, and offering.

Engaging with the Western philosophical tradition from the Neo-Pythagoreans and Plato to Heidegger and Arendt, drawing especially from Augustine and Weil, Goodchild offers striking reconstructions of the meanings of economic, political and religious dimensions of life. The outcome is an elaboration of conceptions of wealth, power, contingency, necessity and grace which give a new orientation to human life and endeavour.

Goodchild situates this discussion within the current historical era of the breakdown of global financial capitalism. He draws from the Financial Revolution in England as a time of crisis which illuminates our own. Faced with a range of global crises, Goodchild proposes an alternative between strategies for survival: either submission before a Great Machine of Credit as an autonomous, unthinking system for regulating human behaviour or accession to the necessity of grace as a way of empowering the pursuit of wealth, justice and thought.

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Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 240 • Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-78661-429-2 • Hardback • June 2021 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-78661-431-5 • eBook • June 2021 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Critical Theory, Philosophy / Continental Philosophy, Philosophy / Critical Thinking, Philosophy / Metaphysics, Religion / Theology

Philip Goodchild is professor of religion and philosophy at the University of Nottingham.

Preface:A discourteous welcome

Part One:Introducing the Metaphysics of Trust

First Parable:A failed escape

Chapter One:Trust and orientation

Chapter Two:The metaphysics of everyday life

Chapter Three: Finitude and trust

Chapter Four:A Recapitulation

Part Two:Wealth and Appropriation: Metaphysics of Credit

Second Parable: The usurper

Chapter Five:Land, human power, and capital

Chapter Six:The wealth of significance

Chapter Seven: More or less real

Chapter Eight: Dwelling within limits

Chapter Nine:Varieties of appropriation

Chapter Ten:Living economically

Part Three:Power and Participation: Politics of Credit

Third Parable:The city of justice

Chapter Eleven: Religion, reason and will

Chapter Twelve: State power

Chapter Thirteen: Individual power

Chapter Fourteen: Respect and participation

Chapter Fifteen: Justice and metaphysics

Chapter Sixteen: Politics of faith

Part Four: Necessity and Grace: Theology of Credit

Fourth Parable: The Great Machine of Credit

Chapter Fifteen: The birth of the modern age

Chapter Sixteen: The end of global capitalism

Chapter Seventeen: The miracle of redemption

Chapter Eighteen: The potency of ideas

Chapter Nineteen: Trust and grace

Conclusion: Repetition

Philip Goodchild’s work has long been recognised as the epitome of a creative thinking that flouts all disciplinary ghettos—and The Metaphysics of Trust is no exception. Through a heady combination of the critical, the speculative and the poetic, Goodchild here completes his longstanding project of displacing Western metaphysics by way of a thoughtful attention to trust.


— Daniel Whistler, reader in modern european philosophy, Royal Holloway, University of London


His groundbreaking work Theology of Money established Philip Goodchild among the foremost theoreticians of the religion of capitalism. In this analysis of the slippery and yet indispensable concept of trust, at once grounded in the classics of the biblical and Western traditions and close to life, Goodchild reimagines philosophy of religion as a critical discipline and a way of life.


— Adam Kotsko, Shimer Great Books School, North Central College


In this monumental conclusion to his magisterial trilogy, Philip Goodchild passes from the critique of economic theology to the construction of a metaphysical economics, one that reveals modernity and its nihilistic economics of necessity, grounded in mistrust, as the chimera of that which is never necessary but always potent: trust itself. Thus Goodhcild offers a compelling pragmatic metaphysics in lieu of the false immediacies of economic rationality, reintroducing the unlimited, the immeasurable, and the interminable into the heart of thought and life.


— Joshua Ramey, Visiting Assistant Professor of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights, Haverford College, USA


The Metaphysics of Trust

Credit and Faith III

Cover Image
Hardback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Following Credit and Faith and Economic Theology, this third volume in the series develops a metaphysics which is missing when trust is ordered around economic theories and institutions. Human existence may be conceived according to its temporal dimensions of appropriation, participation, and offering.

    Engaging with the Western philosophical tradition from the Neo-Pythagoreans and Plato to Heidegger and Arendt, drawing especially from Augustine and Weil, Goodchild offers striking reconstructions of the meanings of economic, political and religious dimensions of life. The outcome is an elaboration of conceptions of wealth, power, contingency, necessity and grace which give a new orientation to human life and endeavour.

    Goodchild situates this discussion within the current historical era of the breakdown of global financial capitalism. He draws from the Financial Revolution in England as a time of crisis which illuminates our own. Faced with a range of global crises, Goodchild proposes an alternative between strategies for survival: either submission before a Great Machine of Credit as an autonomous, unthinking system for regulating human behaviour or accession to the necessity of grace as a way of empowering the pursuit of wealth, justice and thought.

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
    Pages: 240 • Trim: 6¼ x 9
    978-1-78661-429-2 • Hardback • June 2021 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
    978-1-78661-431-5 • eBook • June 2021 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
    Subjects: Philosophy / Movements / Critical Theory, Philosophy / Continental Philosophy, Philosophy / Critical Thinking, Philosophy / Metaphysics, Religion / Theology
Author
Author
  • Philip Goodchild is professor of religion and philosophy at the University of Nottingham.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Preface:A discourteous welcome

    Part One:Introducing the Metaphysics of Trust

    First Parable:A failed escape

    Chapter One:Trust and orientation

    Chapter Two:The metaphysics of everyday life

    Chapter Three: Finitude and trust

    Chapter Four:A Recapitulation

    Part Two:Wealth and Appropriation: Metaphysics of Credit

    Second Parable: The usurper

    Chapter Five:Land, human power, and capital

    Chapter Six:The wealth of significance

    Chapter Seven: More or less real

    Chapter Eight: Dwelling within limits

    Chapter Nine:Varieties of appropriation

    Chapter Ten:Living economically

    Part Three:Power and Participation: Politics of Credit

    Third Parable:The city of justice

    Chapter Eleven: Religion, reason and will

    Chapter Twelve: State power

    Chapter Thirteen: Individual power

    Chapter Fourteen: Respect and participation

    Chapter Fifteen: Justice and metaphysics

    Chapter Sixteen: Politics of faith

    Part Four: Necessity and Grace: Theology of Credit

    Fourth Parable: The Great Machine of Credit

    Chapter Fifteen: The birth of the modern age

    Chapter Sixteen: The end of global capitalism

    Chapter Seventeen: The miracle of redemption

    Chapter Eighteen: The potency of ideas

    Chapter Nineteen: Trust and grace

    Conclusion: Repetition

Reviews
Reviews
  • Philip Goodchild’s work has long been recognised as the epitome of a creative thinking that flouts all disciplinary ghettos—and The Metaphysics of Trust is no exception. Through a heady combination of the critical, the speculative and the poetic, Goodchild here completes his longstanding project of displacing Western metaphysics by way of a thoughtful attention to trust.


    — Daniel Whistler, reader in modern european philosophy, Royal Holloway, University of London


    His groundbreaking work Theology of Money established Philip Goodchild among the foremost theoreticians of the religion of capitalism. In this analysis of the slippery and yet indispensable concept of trust, at once grounded in the classics of the biblical and Western traditions and close to life, Goodchild reimagines philosophy of religion as a critical discipline and a way of life.


    — Adam Kotsko, Shimer Great Books School, North Central College


    In this monumental conclusion to his magisterial trilogy, Philip Goodchild passes from the critique of economic theology to the construction of a metaphysical economics, one that reveals modernity and its nihilistic economics of necessity, grounded in mistrust, as the chimera of that which is never necessary but always potent: trust itself. Thus Goodhcild offers a compelling pragmatic metaphysics in lieu of the false immediacies of economic rationality, reintroducing the unlimited, the immeasurable, and the interminable into the heart of thought and life.


    — Joshua Ramey, Visiting Assistant Professor of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights, Haverford College, USA


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