Mark Wynn’s book (currently senior lecturer at Exeter University, UK) represents an original attempt to bring forward for discussion some of the classic paradigms of both theology and philosophy. The title itself is a surprising one (Faith and Place. An Essay in Embodied Religious Epistemology) and clearly specifies the theme set for research: the re-evaluation of the signification that ‘the Place’ has, and a new discussion about what location, as a phenomenological ‘gesture’ in relation with the religious experience, is.