Medieval philosophy : an historical and philosophical introduction

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Medieval philosophy : an historical and philosophical introduction

John Marenbon

Routledge, 2007

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 385-436) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This new introduction replaces Marenbon's best-selling editions Early Medieval Philosophy (1983) and Later Medieval Philosophy (1987) to present a single authoritative and comprehensive study of the period. It gives a lucid and engaging account of the history of philosophy in the Middle Ages, discussing the main writers and ideas, the social and intellectual contexts, and the important concepts used in medieval philosophy. Medieval Philosophy gives a chronological account which: treats all four main traditions of philosophy that stem from the Greek heritage of late antiquity: Greek Christian philosophy, Latin philosophy, Arabic philosophy and Jewish philosophy provides a series of 'study' sections for close attention to arguments and shorter 'interludes' that point to the wider questions of the intellectual context combines philosophical analysis with historical background includes a helpful detailed guide to further reading and an extensive bibliography All students of medieval philosophy, medieval history, theology or religion will find this necessary reading.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. The Ancient Traditions in Medieval Philosophy 3. Old Traditions and New Beginnings 4. Traditions Apart 5. The Latin Twelfth Century 6. Philosophy in Twelfth-Century Islam 7. Philosophy in Paris and Oxford, 1200-1277 8. Philosophy in the Universities 1277-1400 9. Philosophy Outside the Universities, 1200-1400 10. Not an Epilogue: 'Medieval' Philosophy, 1400-1700

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