Schuon goes to the root of the impasse reached by the modern mind, resulting from the difficulty so many people have in accepting the symbolic expressions of religion in the face of academicrationalism, relativism and the discoveries of science. These essays clear the ground, beginning with the crucial reintegration ofintelligence and our need for causal explanations, long left neglected and outside faith. The transcendent and primordial nature of Revelation, intellect, faith, prayer and the human condition are set forthin a framework that reconciles the apparent incompatibilitybetween metaphysics–commonly confused with rational thought—and the love of God, often seen only from the standpoint of sentimentality.
“If there is an ‘exact science’ embracing all that is, it resides inconsciousness of the realities underlying both the traditionalsymbols and the fundamental virtues, which are the ‘splendor of the true.’ “