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Christians, Gnostics and Philosophers in Late Antiquity
Christians, Gnostics and Philosophers in Late Antiquity
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A01=Mark Edwards
Adversus Haereses
Ammonius Saccas
Author_Mark Edwards
Category=QRMB
Category=QRYC1
Chaldaean Oracles
Christian Origen
Contra Celsum
Cosmic Demiurge
De Antro
De Principiis
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Fertile Precedent
Gregory Thaumaturgus
Intelligible Triad
Jung Codex
Maximinus Daia
Nag Hammadi
Nag Hammadi Codex
Oratio Ad Graecos
Origen's Contra Celsum
Origen’s Contra Celsum
Plato's Demiurge
Plato’s Demiurge
Porphyry's Account
Porphyry's Life
Porphyry’s Account
Porphyry’s Life
Supernal Beauty
Thyestean Banquets
Tripartite Tractate
Vita Plotini
Vitae Sophistarum
Product details
- ISBN 9781138115682
- Weight: 620g
- Dimensions: 150 x 224mm
- Publication Date: 22 May 2017
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
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Gnosticism, Christianity and late antique philosophy are often studied separately; when studied together they are too often conflated. These articles set out to show that we misunderstand all three phenomena if we take either approach. We cannot interpret, or even identify, Christian Gnosticism without Platonic evidence; we may even discover that Gnosticism throws unexpected light on the Platonic imagination. At the same time, if we read writers like Origen simply as Christian Platonists, or bring Christians and philosophers together under the porous umbrella of "monotheism", we ignore fundamental features of both traditions. To grasp what made Christianity distinctive, we must look at the questions asked in the studies here, not merely what Christians appropriated but how it was appropriated. What did the pagan gods mean to a Christian poet of the fifth century? What did Paul quote when he thought he was quoting Greek poetry? What did Socrates mean to the Christians, and can we trust their memories when they appeal to lost fragments of the Presocratics? When pagans accuse the Christians of moral turpitude, do they know more or less about them than we do? What divides Augustine, the disenchanted Platonist, from his Neoplatonic contemporaries? And what God or gods await the Neoplatonist when he dies?
Dr Mark Edwards is University Lecturer in Patristics, and Tutor in Theology, Christ Church, University of Oxford, UK
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