“Radical Orthodoxy can perhaps meaningfully be viewed as an attempt at a second Renaissance, in the wake of the abortion of the first owing to the reformations and counter-reformations in the sixteenth century. Like the Italian Renaissance, it shows an interest in the sciences and the arts, all taken up in a renewed theological vision. Unlike the Italian Renaissance, this British Renaissance has few actual scientists and artists that it can claim for its own. This lends Radical Orthodoxy the air of a fantasy theology, a tradition that could have been but has yet actually to be. It appears as interpretations of paintings that have yet to be produced, music that has yet to be composed, and dramas that have yet to be staged.” - Wikipedia article on Radical Orthodoxy.
One word, starts with an “h”…