Newman and his Critics

Newman and his Critics

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Cardinal Newman’s life was not without controversy, whether it was in his dispute with novelist Charles Kingsley, or the Liberal Prime Minister W.E. Gladstone. Here, Edward Short explores these incidents to show how the opposing viewpoints he encountered helped him to articulate and defend the positions he took on religion, education, and philosophy.
Newman and His Critics takes a close look at how Newman came to many of his religious and intellectual positions in the shadow of the Enlightenment. Thoroughly familiar with the works of such brilliant critics as Hume and Voltaire, Newman recognized that, to make the case for Christianity, he would have to confront a redoubtable and ever-evolving tradition of scepticism and rationalism. In the critical attention he received from Victorian, Newman would tackle the opposing viewpoints of rationalism, Whig historiography, liberal Catholicism, liberal Anglicanism and scholarly Dissent.
Short shows how Newman welcomed viewpoints opposed to his own in order to persuade his contemporaries of the enduring appeal of Catholicism.

Edward Short is the author of Newman and His Family (2013) and Newman and His Contemporaries (2011), which was named one of the best books of 2011 by the BBC History Magazine. He lives in New York with his wife and daughter.

Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Richard Whately and the Oriel Senior Common Room
2. Mark Pattison
3. James Anthony Froude
3. John Darby
4. Charles Kingsley
5. Edwin A. Abbott
6. Frederic Meyrick
8. Henry Hart Milman
9. R.W. Church
10. Gerard Manley Hopkins
11. Lord Acton
12. William Ewart Gladstone
13. A.M. Fairbairn
14. William Walsh
15. Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index

Additional information

Weight 1 oz
Dimensions 25 × 156 × 9 in