Bracken, Joseph, S.J. The Divine Matrix: Creativity as Link Between East and West. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1995.
Abstract
Dialogue among religions has
always been challenging. Today, the questions are becoming more
fundamental: are the various traditions - Buddhist, Christian, Hindu,
Tao - even talking about the same thing when they speak of Nature, or
God, Emptiness, or Brahman? The
Divine Matrix represents a bold scholarly
attempt to provide a framework for discussing these - and other -
questions that will keep the interreligious dialogue project from
grinding to a halt. In The
Divine Matrix philosopher and theologian Joseph Bracken
first locates the Infinite as transcendent source and goal of human
activity as the notion common to virtually all the major world
religions. He suggests that the Infinite is prototypically experienced
not as an entity but as an ongoing activity - the principle of activity
for all beings (God included). This idea is consistent with the notion
of eternal and continuous motion in Aristotle, with the "act of being" (actus essendi) in
the theology of Thomas Aquinas and Meister Eckhart, and with the ground
of being of Shelling and Heidegger, as well as with Whitehead's
definition of "creativity." Bracken goes on to show that this idea is
implicit in descriptions of Brahman in the Hindu Upanishads, in the
experience of pratitya-samutpada
("dependent co-arising") in classical Buddhism, and in descriptions of
the Tao in Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu.