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Anselm
Details
Anselm was the outstanding philosopher-theologian of the Latin West between Augustine and the thirteenth century. This introduction examines the historical and political contexts that shaped his work and explains his central project of 'faith seeking understanding,' encompassing arguments for the existence of God and an account of God's nature.
Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109) was the outstanding philosopher-theologian of the Latin West between Augustine and the thirteenth century. As a public figure, especially as Archbishop of Canterbury, he corresponded with kings and nobles, popes and bishops, in letters that reveal a fascinating personality and flesh out the practical dimensions of his theoretical philosophy. He wrote at a time when a renewed interest in logic encouraged careful and rigorous argumentation, but before the recovery of Aristotle filled the philosophical discourse with difficult technical jargon, making for writing that is unrivalled for its lucidity and accessibility. He offers the first clear account of what we now call a libertarian view of free will, according to which free choices cannot be determined by the agent's internal states or by external influences. His famous 'ontological argument' for the existence of God continues to generate discussion, debate, and puzzlement. His understanding of God is rightly regarded as one of the definitive expressions of classical theism or perfect-being theology, which remains influential in philosophy of religion and analytic theology. His account of the Atonement is one that every theologian to this day still grapples with.
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Thomas Williams manages to channel the approachability of the original in this beautifully balanced book. He presents Anselm's thought as a network of ideas and invites the reader to explore their interrelatedness.
Autorentext
Thomas Williams is the Isabelle A. and Henry D. Martin Professor of Medieval Philosophy at Georgetown University. He has published widely on medieval philosophy and theology. He is co-author of Anselm (2008), editor of The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Ethics (2018) and The Cambridge Companion to Duns Scotus (2003), and translator of Augustine: Confessions (2019), John Duns Scotus: Selected Writings on Ethics (2017), Thomas Aquinas: The Treatise on Happiness and Treatise on Human Acts (2016), and Anselm: The Complete Treatises with Selected Letters and Prayers and the Meditation on Human Redemption (2022).
Inhalt
Preface; List of Illustrations; Chronology; 1 Anselm's life, works, and contexts; 2 Looking at God; 3 Looking for God; 4 How things got started; 5 How things went wrong; 6 The great restoration project; 7 Living in the meantime; Further Reading; References
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09780192897817
- Anzahl Seiten 136
- Genre Books about Philosophy & Religion
- Herausgeber Oxford University Press
- Gewicht 102g
- Untertitel A Very Short Introduction
- Größe H175mm x B111mm x T7mm
- Jahr 2022
- EAN 9780192897817
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-0-19-289781-7
- Veröffentlichung 24.11.2022
- Titel Anselm
- Autor Thomas Williams
- Sprache Englisch