The Irrational AugustineOUP Oxford, 20 באפר׳ 2006 - 223 עמודים The Irrational Augustine takes the notion of St Augustine as rigid and dogmatic Father of the Church and turns it on its head. Catherine Conybeare reads Augustine's earliest works to discover the anti-dogmatic Augustine, who values changeability and human interconnectedness and deplores social exclusion. The novelty of her book lies in taking seriously the nature of these early works as performances, through which multiple questions can be raised and multiple options explored, both in words and through their dramatic framework. The theological consequences are considerable. A very human Augustine emerges, talking and playing with friends and family, including his mother - and a very sympathetic set of ideas is the result. |
תוכן
Introduction | 1 |
Why Dialogues? | 9 |
Women Doing Philosophy | 61 |
The Irrational Augustine | 139 |
Exploiting Potential | 173 |
Note on Method | 193 |
Bibliography | 203 |
217 | |
222 | |
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Acad Academicis Academics aliquid Alypius anima atque auctoritas audience Augus Augustine seems Augustine's autem Beata Vita beatus beginning body Cassiciacum dialogues Christ Christian Cicero Ciceronian claim conf Confessiones context conversation crucial debate deum deus discussion divine enim etiam evil fact Genesi Contra Manichaeos genre Gillian Clark human illa implications intellectual interlocutors ista language later Latin letter liberal disciplines Licentius liminal Manichaeans Manichaeism mater metaphor mihi mind Monnica Moribus mother move Nebridius Neoplatonic nescio nihil Note notion O'Donnell Ordine otium Oxford participants passage Paulinus of Nola perhaps person philosophical dialogue philosophy Pierre Hadot Plato Plotinus portrayed potential potest quae quam question quid quod ratio rationibus readers reading reference retr Retractationes role Romanianus Rowan Williams saint Augustin sapientia says sense simply Soliloquia soul sunt tamen teaching Theodorus things truth Trygetius uerba uita wisdom wise words writing Zenobius