The Rise of Christian Theology and the End of Ancient Metaphysics: Patristic Philosophy from the Cappadocian Fathers to John of Damascus
Autor Johannes Zachhuberen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 oct 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192885302
ISBN-10: 0192885308
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 153 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192885308
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 153 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
This excellent book provides a thorough study-to my knowledge, the first of its kind-of the philosophical dimension of Christian doctrine in late antiquity...I think, the most important book on early Christian doctrine in the past decade or more. It is clearly written, though conceptually demanding, and thereby provides a needed model for how to study dogmatic theology's complex philosophical underpinnings.
Zachhuber has produced an important work for the study of early Greek Christian thought, certain to appear in many footnotes and bibliographies in the years to come and rightly so. The work is highly recommended for its perceptive interpretive thesis and expansive scope and deserves a close reading by philosophers, church historians, and Christian historical and systematic theologians.
Zachhuber offers a fascinating journey through the fluctuating fortunes of ousia and hypostasis. Some will undoubtedly find it difficult to apply the phrase 'Christian philosophy', mostly I suspect due to outmoded prejudices - but if recent studies on the relation of theology and philosophy in late antiquity are anything to go by, it will become necessary to engage with it. This engagement with philosophical ideas cuts across the Christian communities of the time, and unless we are prepared to examine what was happening in these variant traditions, we shall fail to grasp the historical significance of this intellectually exciting epoch.
Zachhuber's brief history of Christian philosophy in the Greek-speaking world from the fourth to the eighth century convincingly shows that the later so-called mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation can be explained by means of natural reason, that is, against the background of ancient, especially Aristotelian and Stoic philosophy. This leads to the discovery or rediscovery of almost forgotten authors within the tradition of "Christian philosophy." The introduction afforded in this book, from Cappadocian philosophy to the philosophy of the individual, is of utmost relevance to the history of philosophy and to philosophy itself.
Zachhuber has a penetrating eye for the subtleties of theological metaphysics, yet he is also admirably charitable to the writers he treats and capable of judiciously identifying both their strengths and their weaknesses ... This book will be of interest to students of patristic theology as well as to systematic theologians, given the fascination with Chalcedon in contemporary Christology.
The significance of Zachhuber's book cannot be overstated ... this provocative book brings to the surface old battles [...] while at the same time inaugurating a new phase in Gregorian scholarship.
Zachhuber's deeply philosophical book will be of enduring significance for historians of philosophy and theologians alike as well as scholars interested in the historical period from the perspectives of classical studies and ancient history.
Zachhuber's work is a significant contribution to our understanding of the development of patristic thought. It lays a foundation for the study of its influence in Western and Eastern Christendom and beyond.
It is beyond any doubt that this book is a singular achievement.
Zachhuber has produced an important work for the study of early Greek Christian thought, certain to appear in many footnotes and bibliographies in the years to come and rightly so. The work is highly recommended for its perceptive interpretive thesis and expansive scope and deserves a close reading by philosophers, church historians, and Christian historical and systematic theologians.
Zachhuber offers a fascinating journey through the fluctuating fortunes of ousia and hypostasis. Some will undoubtedly find it difficult to apply the phrase 'Christian philosophy', mostly I suspect due to outmoded prejudices - but if recent studies on the relation of theology and philosophy in late antiquity are anything to go by, it will become necessary to engage with it. This engagement with philosophical ideas cuts across the Christian communities of the time, and unless we are prepared to examine what was happening in these variant traditions, we shall fail to grasp the historical significance of this intellectually exciting epoch.
Zachhuber's brief history of Christian philosophy in the Greek-speaking world from the fourth to the eighth century convincingly shows that the later so-called mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation can be explained by means of natural reason, that is, against the background of ancient, especially Aristotelian and Stoic philosophy. This leads to the discovery or rediscovery of almost forgotten authors within the tradition of "Christian philosophy." The introduction afforded in this book, from Cappadocian philosophy to the philosophy of the individual, is of utmost relevance to the history of philosophy and to philosophy itself.
Zachhuber has a penetrating eye for the subtleties of theological metaphysics, yet he is also admirably charitable to the writers he treats and capable of judiciously identifying both their strengths and their weaknesses ... This book will be of interest to students of patristic theology as well as to systematic theologians, given the fascination with Chalcedon in contemporary Christology.
The significance of Zachhuber's book cannot be overstated ... this provocative book brings to the surface old battles [...] while at the same time inaugurating a new phase in Gregorian scholarship.
Zachhuber's deeply philosophical book will be of enduring significance for historians of philosophy and theologians alike as well as scholars interested in the historical period from the perspectives of classical studies and ancient history.
Zachhuber's work is a significant contribution to our understanding of the development of patristic thought. It lays a foundation for the study of its influence in Western and Eastern Christendom and beyond.
It is beyond any doubt that this book is a singular achievement.
Notă biografică
Johannes Zachhuber is Professor of Historical and Systematic Theology at the University of Oxford and Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. He studied theology in Rostock, Berlin, and Oxford where he earned his DPhil in 1997. He has published Human Nature in Gregory of Nyssa (1999) and Theology as Science in Nineteenth-Century Germany (2013) as well as numerous articles mostly in the areas of late ancient Christianity and nineteenth-century theology.