The Cambridge Companion to Augustine

Framsida
Eleonore Stump, Norman Kretzmann
Cambridge University Press, 15 mars 2001 - 307 sidor
It is hard to overestimate the importance of the work of Augustine of Hippo, both in his own period and in the subsequent history of Western philosophy. Until the thirteenth century, when he may have had a competitor in Thomas Aquinas, he was the most important philosopher of the medieval period. Many of his views, including his theory of the just war, his account of time and eternity, his understanding of the will, his attempted resolution of the problem of evil, and his approach to the relation of faith and reason, have continued to be influential up to the present time. In this 2001 volume of specially-commissioned essays, sixteen scholars provide a wide-ranging and stimulating contribution to our understanding of Augustine, covering all the major areas of his philosophy and theology.
 

Innehåll

Introduction
1
Augustine his time and lives
8
Faith and reason
26
Augustine on evil and original sin
40
Predestination Pelagianism and foreknowledge
49
Biblical interpretation
59
The divine nature
71
De Trinitate
91
Augustines philosophy of memory
148
The response to skepticism and the mechanisms of cognition
159
Knowledge and illumination
171
Augustines philosophy of language
186
Augustines ethics
205
Augustines political philosophy
234
Augustine and medieval philosophy
253
Postmedieval Augustinianism
267

Time and creation in Augustine
103
Augustines theory of soul
116
Augustine on free will
124

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