An Investigation Concerning the State: The Collected Works of Edith Stein, vol. 10

· The Collected Works of Edith Stein 第 10 冊 · ICS Publications
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Any state exists only for the benefit of human beings.  This basic tenet of Edith Stein's political thought rests on her conviction that humanity is fundamentally one community, precious beyond measure.  Differences of race, culture, and language offer us means to grasp the values of life uniquely so that we may share them universally, reaching across all such social boundaries.
Stein wrote this treatise in the early days of the Weimar Republic, shortly after the First World War.  It sets forth a philosophy of law,  government, and administration that is at once idealistic and practical.  What is right, Stein argues, does not arise from legislation or litigation or politics.  Right relations, as such, are more basic than any institution.  Here, too, are Stein's first serious discussions of religious issues such as guilt, expiation, and freedom of conscience.  This is the philosophical work that immediately preceded her decision to be baptized, on January 1,  1922.
Whether ironically or predictably, Stein was put to death twenty years later by a state that brazenly defied nearly every principle that she had defended in this treatise. In death she bore personal witness to the unity and dignity of the human race. She perished with her people, Jews and Christians alike, at Auschwitz.
This ebook contains a fully linked Index.

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Edith Stein, born on October 12, 1891, of Jewish parents, converted to Catholicism and was baptized on January 1, 1922. After her conversion, Edith spent her days teaching, lecturing, writing and translating, and she soon became known as a celebrated philosopher and author, but her own great longing was for the solitude and contemplation of Carmel, in which she could offer herself to God for her people. She entered the Discalced Carmelite Nuns cloistered community at Cologne-Lindenthal on October 14, 1933. The following April, Edith received the Habit of Carmel and the religious name of Teresa Benedicta of the Cross and on Easter Sunday, April 21, 1935, she made her Profession of Vows. When the Jewish persecution increased in violence and fanaticism, Sister Teresa Benedicta soon realized the danger that her presence was to the Cologne Carmel, and she asked and received permission to transfer to a foreign monastery. On the night of December 31, 1938, she secretly crossed the border into Holland where she was warmly received in the Carmel of Echt. There she wrote her last work, The Science of the Cross. She died in the gas chambers at Auschwitz on August 9, 1942. She was canonized on October 11, 1998. 

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