The light and the dark: a cultural history of dualism 21 [Dualism and non-dualism in medieval theology and philosophy]
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Beschreibung: | XXXVII, 448 S. |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | XI
CONTENTS
Preface XXI
Manual XXXIII
I
PRE-SCHOLASTIC
AND EARLY SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY AND
THEOLOGY
1
PARTI PRE-SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY
1
1.
Pseudo-Dionysius, the transmitter
1
a. Why Dionysius is labelled
pseudo
1
b.
Two ways of knowing God
1
c. Was Dionysius wholly orthodox?
2
2.
Boethius, between Antiquity and the Middle Ages
3
a. His youth and education
3
b. In conflict with King Theodoric
3
с
Boethius the transmitter of Aristotelianism
4
d. Boethius and
Fortuna
4
3.
hi Boethius line: Cassiodorus
5
4.
Pope Gregory I the Great founding father of Europe
6
a. His life until his election as Pope
6
b. His significance as Pope
6
5.
Stlsidore of Seville and his encyclopedia
7
6.
The level of culture and education
7
7.
Aleuto,
Charlemagne s minister of education
8
a. His career
8
b. His educational work
9
8.
The little foxes
9
a. Migeüus
9
b.
Elipandus
Ю
c.
The position of the
magisterium
11
9.
The Carolingian position with regard to the
veneration of images
12
10.
The
firat
great medieval theologian. Johannes
XII
Scotus
Erigera
13
a. His life
13
b.
An old problem: the pagan heritage
13
с
The claims of reason
14
PARTII
EARLY SCHOLASTIC PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY
16
1.
The problem of the One and the Many
16
2.
Some extreme realists
16
a. Fredegisius
16
b. Remigius of Auxerre
17
c. Odo s
monism
17
3.
The quarrel of the
universais
19
a. Roscelin s nominalism
20
b.
Petrus
Damian!
in the breach
22
4.
Abelard
23
a. A calamitous life
23
b. Deviant opinions
24
с
Abelard castigating William of Champeaux
25
d. Abelard s position
27
e. Abelard s influence
28
5.
Gilbert s peculiar solution
29
a. Two kinds of faithful
29
b. Juggling with philosophical terms
30
с
Doing one better on Plato
31
d. Gilbert s trinitarian theology
32
e. Gilbert under fire
32
6.
The many-sided John of Salisbury
34
NOTES TO CHAPTER I
35
II DUALISM IN MUSLIM AND JEWISH PHILOSOPHY
41
PARTI MUSLIM PHILOSOPHY
41
1.
Islamic thought in general
41
2.
The Mu tazilites
43
3.
Al-Kindi
45
4.
Medieval freethinkers
47
5.
Al-Razi
48
6.
Gnostic influences in Islam
50
7.
The Brethera of Purity
51
8.
The impious al-Rawandi
53
9.
Al-Muqaffa , the man of letters
54
10.
Another Manichaean: al-Warraq
56
11.
A movement of protest
56
12.
Faith and reason in early Islam
58
13.
Al-Maturidi combating dualism
59
14.
Avicenna
60
a. His life
60
XIII
b. Avicenna s
Influence
66
c. Avlcenna
and Muslim faith
66
d. Prophecy and mysticism
68
e. The upward way
69
f. Emanations
71
g. Necessity and contingency
72
h. Matter and form
74
15.
Al-Ghazali, the spokesman of the opposition
76
a. His life
76
b. A caesure in Islamic thought
77
c. Al-Haramayn s
counter-offensive
78
d. al-Ghazali s intellectual quest
80
e. al-Ghazali s home-coming
82
f. The attack on philosophy
83
g. The lid on Islamic philosophy
84
h. al-Ghazali s mysticism
85
j. God s uniqueness
86
k. Conclusion
87
16.
Averroes, the last great philosopher of Islam
87
a. Almohad rule
88
b. Averroes life
89
с
Averroes the Aristotelian
90
d. Averroes and al-Ghazali
91
e. Averroes and Suflsm
92
f. Averroes influence
93
17.
An overview
93
PARTII
JEWISH PHILOSOPHY
94
1.
Jewish mysticism
94
a. Merkabah mysticism
94
b. Kabbalism
95
с
Ha-Koheen s dualim
96
d. The Sefer Ha-Zohar
97
e. Dualism?
100
2.
What is Jewish philosophy?
100
3.
Israeli, the Neoplatonist
102
a. The man and his work
102
b. The downward way: emanation
102
c. Dualism
104
d. The upward way
104
e. Israeli, the Torah and philosophy
106
4.
Gabiről
and the lamps of religion and philosophy
107
a. A Jewish philosopher?
107
b. Gabiroľs
Neoplatonism
108
c. Gabiroľs
emanation theory
109
d.
Gabiről
in the Jewish and Latin worlds
111
5.
Judah Halevi s anti-rationalism
111
6.
Ibn Daud s defence of Judaism
113
XIV
a.
Hls
life and work
113
b.
Was he an Aristotelian?
113
c. The object of his book
114
d. The problem of creation
115
e. Emanation theory
116
f. The origin of forms and matter
118
g. Did Ibn Daud succeed in his design?
119
7.
Maimonides and the perplexed
121
a. His life
121
b. The Guide of the Perplexed and why Maimonides
wrote it
122
с
Two forms of knowledge
122
d. The battle against anthropomorphism
123
e. Maimonides emanation theory
125
f. Maimonides significance
126
NOTES TO CHAPTER II
III THE NON-DUALISTIC PLATFORM OF HIGH SCHOLASTICISM
140
INTRODUCTION
140
1.
The non-dualism of the Middle Ages
140
2.
Fault-lines
142
3.
Arabic influences on Christian thought
144
4.
The influence of Aristotle
144
PART
I ANSELM
AND HIS ONTOLOGY
145
1.
Anselm s life
145
2.
Anselm
as an author
146
3.
Cur
Deus
homo
147
4.
Reason or revelation?
148
5.
Anselm s ontological proof of God s existence
149
6.
An attempt at explanation
150
7.
Criticism of this argument
150
PARTII
SCHOOLMEN OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY
152
A WILLIAM OF
AUVERGNE
153
1.
William of
Auvergne
and Aristotelianism
153
2.
William s philosophical distinctions
153
3.
William and the created order
154
B. ROBERT GROSSETESTE I55
1.
Robert Grosseteste and the English scientific
tradition 155
2.
Grosseteste s new career
156
XV
3.
Grosseteste
on
recala and
universalia
157
4.
Hierarchy and analogy
158
5.
An attempt at explanation
159
6.
Non-dualism
160
С.
BONAVENTURE
161
1.
A man of all seasons
161
2.
Bonaventura
and philosophy
163
3.
Bonaventure s relation to Plato and Aristotle
164
4.
The cotncidentia opposttorum
165
5.
About analogy
166
6.
Bonaventura
and the analogy of being
167
7.
Conclusion
169
D.
SAINT ALBERT THE GREAT
169
1.
Albert s life
169
2.
The range of his studies
171
3.
Albert the Great and pagan philosophy
171
4.
The hierarchical order of the universe
172
E.
ROGER BACON
173
1.
His life
173
2.
Roger Bacon in problems
174
3.
Roger Bacon as a scholar
175
F.
THOMAS AQUINAS
176
1.
The significance of Saint Thomas
176
2.
Thomas s life
176
3.
The man
178
4.
A short moment of harmony
179
5.
Thomas and Aristotle
181
6.
Thomas and dualism
182
7.
The relationship of philosophy and theology
183
8.
The aim of philosophy
184
9.
Thomas s position with regard to the question of
the
universalia
and the
realia
185
10.
Thomas s theory of knowledge
186
11.
The
universais
186
12.
God s existence
187
13.
Some very important scholastic terms
188
14.
About the analogy concept
190
15.
A biblical dilemma
192
16.
Kinds of analogy
192
17.
Thomas and analogy
193
a. The term
analogia entis
193
XVI
b.
Between dangerous cliffs
194
c. Analogy of proportionality
194
d. A fundamental theological problem solved
195
18.
Conclusion
197
NOTES TO CHAPTER III
197
IV DANTE S
SUMMA
208
1.
The general outline of the
Dwina
Commedia
208
2.
Dante s Florence
209
3.
Dante s life
209
4.
Structure and tone of the
Divina
Commedia
211
5.
Virgil, Dante s guide
212
6.
Dante s journey through the Inferno
212
a. The Antinfemo
213
b. The Limbo
213
с
Descending into Hell
214
d. Return to the world above
216
7.
Dante s journey through the
Purgatorio
217
8.
Dante s journey through the
Paradiso
220
9.
By way of conclusion
222
10.
Aspects of Dante s life and work
223
a. Dante the prophet
223
b. Dante and the Church
224
с
Dante and the question of the poverty
of the Church
225
d. Dante and the political power of the Church
225
e. Dante and Boniface
VIII 226
f. Dante and the relationship of Pope and Emperor
227
g. Dante s theocratic vision
228
h. A
vision of harmony
229
j. Was Dante deceiving himself?
230
k. Dante as a non-professional philosopher
231
1.
Dante the poet
232
m. Dante as a theologian
232
11.
Was the thirteenth century there to stay?
233
NOTES TO CHAPTER IV
234
V THE DECONSTRUCnON OF THE NON-DUALISTIC PLATFORM
238
1.
Stephen Tempier s discontent
238
a. The condemnation
238
b. Scrutinizing Tempier s theses
239
с
The results
240
2.
Siger of Brabant
241
a. His life
241
b. Siger, Thomas and Dante
242
с
The radical Aristotelian
243
d. The eternity of the created word
243
XVII
e. God
as the first creative force
244
f. Monopsychism
244
3.
Duns Scotus
245
a. His
Ufe
245
b.
The doctor subtilis
246
c. Duns
Scotus scholarly position
246
4.
The disintegration of scholastic theology
248
5.
Schools of philosophy and theology
249
6.
Durand de Saint-Pourçain
249
a. Durand
censured
249
b.
What was wrong with
Durand?
250
7.
Pierre Auriol
251
a. His
Ufe
251
b.
Individuality and universality
252
с
Matter and forms
253
d. Auriol in difficulties
254
e. The soul s immortaUty
255
8.
WilUam of Ockham
255
a. His
Ufe
255
b.
The conflict over the Franciscan poverty ideal
256
с
Ockham as a poUtical pamphleteer
258
d. Ockham and Avignon
258
e. Ockham and the Empire
260
f. Ockham s razor
261
g. A
sea change
262
h. Ockham s theory of knowledge
262
j. Ockham and his scholastic predecessors
263
k. The difference between High Scholastics and
Ockham
264
1.
God s absolute freedom
266
m. Was Ockham a dualist?
267
n. What made Ockham move?
268
o. Ockham and the
magisterium
of the Church
270
p. To conclude
272
9.
MarsUius of Padua: his life
272
a. The protagonist of imperial poUcy
273
b. Theory of laicist state
274
10.
The Maultasch affair
275
11.
No one between God and the faithful
276
12.
Heralding the future
278
13.
A conclusion
278
14.
How much influence did Ockham and MarsiUus have?
279
15.
Nominalism
280
16.
The consequences for the medieval worldview
282
17.
The Oxford Calculators
283
a. Richard Swineshead
283
b. Richard BilUngham
284
с
Robert Holcot
284
18.
JohnofMirecourt
286
χνπΐ
a. Two types of knowledge
286
b. A reaction against scholasticism
287
с
God s absoluteness
288
d. God s existence not provable
288
19.
Nicholas of Autrecourt
289
a. His life
289
b. His philosophical opinions
290
с
Scepticism
291
d. Consequences
292
20.
Bradwardine s protest
293
a. His life
293
b. The Doctor profundus and the Pelagians
293
с
Terms of uncertainly
294
d. Bradwardine s
magnimi opus
295
e. Bradwardine on God
296
f. Bradwardine on the eternity of the world
296
g. God s will and human freedom
297
h. Philosophy versus theology?
298
j. Bradwardine on salvation
298
k. Breaking new ice
299
21.
Ockhamist strongholds
300
22.
Gabriel
Biel
301
b.
His life
301
с
His works
302
d. Biel
on God s potentia
303
d. Philosophy and theology
304
e. Biel
on
justification
304
23.
Is nominalism orthodox theology
305
NOTES TO CHAPTER V
VI LATERAL LINKS
1.
Gnostic influences
316
2.
The influence of Greek philosophy
317
3.
Faith and reason
318
4.
Protests against Aristotelianism
319
5.
Dualism
319
VII DESTABILIZATION
Introduction
321
PART I THE BLACK DEATH
325
1.
Epidemics
325
2.
Why the Black Death ?
325
3.
A description of the disease
326
4.
What caused the Black Death
327
5.
An ill prepared population
327
XIX
6.
The beginning and spread of the plague
328
7.
The victims
330
8.
The overall picture
331
9.
How people reacted
332
10.
Looking for culprits
333
11.
Atropaeic measures
333
12.
The consequences
335
PART II THE WANING PRESTIGE OF THE PAPACY
337
1.
The conflict of Philip
le Bel
with Boniface
VIII 337
a. The adversaries
337
b. The issue
338
с
The first round of hostilities
339
d. Boniface s universal claims
340
e. The attack on Pope Boniface
343
f. The loser and the victor
344
2.
The Babylonian Captivity of the Church
345
a. The move to Avignon
345
b. The situation of Avignon
345
с
The chaplains of the King of France
346
d. The return to Rome
347
3.
The Great Schism
347
4.
The
conciliar
theory
349
5.
The need for reform
350
6.
The Renaissance Popes
351
a. The splendour of Rome
351
b. Sixtus
IV
352
c.
Innocent
VIII 353
d.
Alexander VI
354
e.
Julius II and Leo X
355
PART
ΙΠ
THE PROPHETIC FUTURE
355
1.
Joachim da Fiore s life
356
2.
Joachim s Order
359
3.
The battle over Joachim s orthodoxy
359
4.
Joachimite chronology
360
5.
God and the believer
364
6.
The beginning of the third epoch
364
7.
The Antichrist and the Golden Age
365
8.
Was Joachim
da Fiore a
dualist?
366
9.
The success of the threepartite scheme
366
10.
The Antichrist
368
11.
Elaborations of Joachim s prophecy
369
12.
The Last World Emperor
370
13.
Franco-German rivalry in the field of prophecy:
the French offensive
371
14.
Franco-German rivalry in the field of prophecy:
XX
the German counter-offensive
373
PART IV THE POVERTY IDEAL
374
1.
The Pataria
375
2.
The Mendicant Orders and the Tertiary Orders
375
3.
The Pauperes
Christi 376
4.
Beyond the borders of orthodoxy: Henry of Lausanne
378
5.
The Franciscan Spirituales
379
6.
The Waldensian movement
381
a. Vaudès
Ufe
381
b.
The early Waldensians
382
с
Conflicts
383
d. The spread of the movement
384
e. Exercizing pastoral functions
385
f. Tensions within the movement
386
g. The Pauperes catholici
387
h. The Pauperes
Lombardií
387
j.
An attempt at reconciliation
388
k. The French Waldensians
389
1.
The North Italian Waldensians
390
m. The later Waldensians
391
7.
Savonarola, the prophet of poverty
391
a. His early years
392
b. To the convent
394
с
The prophetic preacher
395
d. A preaching competition
397
e. In politics
398
f. Florence at his feet
400
g. Growing opposition
401
h. The failed ordeal
402
j. The downfall
403
k. Assessment
405
NOTES TO CHAPTER
VII
406
|
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bvnumber | BV019695487 |
classification_rvk | CE 1060 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)230003903 (DE-599)BVBBV019695487 |
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era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV019695487 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:04:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9051792743 9789051792744 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-013023170 |
oclc_num | 230003903 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-29 DE-12 |
physical | XXXVII, 448 S. |
psigel | gbd_8 |
publishDate | 2005 |
publishDateSearch | 2005 |
publishDateSort | 2005 |
publisher | Gieben |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism 21 [Dualism and non-dualism in medieval theology and philosophy] Amsterdam Gieben [ca. 2005] XXXVII, 448 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Dualismus (DE-588)4130223-0 gnd rswk-swf Dualismus (DE-588)4130223-0 s Geschichte z DE-604 (DE-604)BV000565138 21 Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013023170&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism Dualismus (DE-588)4130223-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4130223-0 |
title | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism |
title_auth | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism |
title_exact_search | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism |
title_full | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism 21 [Dualism and non-dualism in medieval theology and philosophy] |
title_fullStr | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism 21 [Dualism and non-dualism in medieval theology and philosophy] |
title_full_unstemmed | The light and the dark a cultural history of dualism 21 [Dualism and non-dualism in medieval theology and philosophy] |
title_short | The light and the dark |
title_sort | the light and the dark a cultural history of dualism dualism and non dualism in medieval theology and philosophy |
title_sub | a cultural history of dualism |
topic | Dualismus (DE-588)4130223-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Dualismus |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=013023170&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000565138 |