Neville, Robert C. The Tao and the Daimon: Segments of a Religious Inquiry. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982.
Abstract
The Tao and the Daimon
examines a central theme in religious studies: the question of the
authority and authenticity of traditional religious faith and practice
(tao) in light of the challenge from the spirit of critical reason
(Socrates' daimon). From a non-judgmental, historical standpoint, it
develops the dialectical relation between religion and rational
inquiry. Neville employs a philosophical system to set a task for
reflection, making it possible to see how Eastern and Western religious
traditions differ, overlap, contradict, and reinforce one another. The
central chapters are detailed studies of theologically interesting
elements in Christianity, Buddhism, taoism, and Neoconfucianism. How
can one judge of the higher truths of another religion without having
practiced it? Can the tao and the daimon, after all, be reconciled
purely in the conceptual realm of speculative philosophy? Neville
recognizes the very real differences between conceptualizing and
practicing and the very real differences in understanding that can
result. At the same time, he transcends the problem by identifying (and
exemplifying in his own work) speculative philosophy as a tao in
itself, "a new locus of religious significance, our own scholarly
interpretation, new creations of the holy out of practiced scholarly
piety for the old."