Humus
A series of twelve essays tuned to Chopin’s preludes that focuses precisely on history and hope in the context of Fred Crowe’s gallant struggle to “move the first sod” (Theology of the Christian Word: A Study in History [New York, Paulist Press], 149). Underlying the series is the hope of generating something of a mood, an ethos, which would lift those interested in history towards collaboration, with functional collaboration as an objective.
(Please note that in some of the essays there are hyperlinks to works hosted on an earlier version of this website. All of those essays are now available on this website and can be easily found using the search bar.)
Humus 1: Preludes
Humus 2: Vis Cogitativa: Contemporary Defective Patterns of Anticipation
Humus 3: Humus, Horizon, Fieldcyclings
Humus 4: Let’s Try Talking Functionally
Humus 5: Trying to Talk Functionally
Humus 6: Repatterning the Superegos’ Molecular Religiosity
Humus 7: The Effective Transposition of Global Economics
Humus 8: Crowe’s Theology of the Christian Word
Humus 9: Frederick Crowe and Ourselves as Researchers
Humus 10: Fr. Crowe’s “The Christian Message Begins”
Humus 11: “The Word of God As Truth”
Humus 12: Crowe: Possibilities of Methodical Collaboration