The Closing Of The Western Mind - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
Richards, Hubert. St Paul and His Epistles: A New Introduction. St Paul and His Epistles: A New Introduction. London, 1979. Rihill, T. E. London, 1979. Rihill, T. E. Greek Science. Greek Science. Oxford, 1999. Oxford, 1999.
Rist, John. Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptised. Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptised. Cambridge, 1994. Cambridge, 1994.
---. "Plotinus and Christian Philosophy." In Lloyd P. Gerson, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus. Companion to Plotinus. Cambridge, 1996. Cambridge, 1996.
Rives, J. Religion and Authority in Roman Carthage from Augustus to Constantine. Religion and Authority in Roman Carthage from Augustus to Constantine. Oxford, 1995. Oxford, 1995.
Robb, Kevin, ed. Language and Thought in Early Greek Philosophy. Language and Thought in Early Greek Philosophy. La Salle, Ill., 1983. La Salle, Ill., 1983.
Rogerson, John, ed. The Oxford Ill.u.s.trated History of the Bible. The Oxford Ill.u.s.trated History of the Bible. Oxford, 2001. Oxford, 2001.
Rorem, Paul. "The Uplifting Spirituality of Pseudo-Dionysius." In Bernard McGinn and John Meyendorff, eds., Christian Spirituality: Origins to the Twelfth Century. Christian Spirituality: Origins to the Twelfth Century. London, 1986. London, 1986.
Rousseau, Philip. Ascetics, Authority and the Church in the Age of Jerome and Ascetics, Authority and the Church in the Age of Jerome and Ca.s.sian. Ca.s.sian. Oxford, 1978. Oxford, 1978.
Ruether, Rosemary. Faith and Fratricide: The Theological Roots of Anti-Semitism. Faith and Fratricide: The Theological Roots of Anti-Semitism. New York, 1974. New York, 1974.
---. Gregory of n.a.z.ianzus: Rhetor and Philosopher. Gregory of n.a.z.ianzus: Rhetor and Philosopher. Oxford, 1969. Oxford, 1969.
Runciman, W. G. "Doomed to Extinction: The Polis as an Evolutionary Dead-End." In Oswyn Murray and Simon Price, eds., The Greek City from Homer to The Greek City from Homer to Alexander. Alexander. Oxford, 1990. Oxford, 1990.
Sanders, E. P. The Historical Figure of Jesus. Harmondsworth, 1993.
---. Paul. Paul. Oxford, 1991. Oxford, 1991.
Segal, Alan. "Universalism in Judaism and Christianity." In Troels Engbury-Pedersen, ed., Paul in His h.e.l.lenistic Context. Paul in His h.e.l.lenistic Context. Edinburgh, 1994. Edinburgh, 1994.
s.h.i.+pley, Graham. The Greek World After Alexander, 32330 B.C. London, 2000.
Shotter, David. The Fall of the Roman Republic. The Fall of the Roman Republic. London and New York, 1994. London and New York, 1994.
Sim, David C. The Gospel of Matthew and Christian Judaism. Edinburgh, 1998.
Simmons, M. B. "Julian the Apostate." In P. Esler, ed., The Early Christian World, vol. 2. New York and London, 2000.
Simon, Marcus. Verus Israel. Verus Israel. Oxford, 1986. Oxford, 1986.
Simonetti, M. Profilo storico dell'esegesi patristica. Profilo storico dell'esegesi patristica. Rome, 1980. Rome, 1980.
Singer, Peter. Animal Liberation. Animal Liberation. 2nd ed. London, 1990. 2nd ed. London, 1990.
Siorvanes, Lucas. Proclus: Neo-Platonic Philosophy and Science. Proclus: Neo-Platonic Philosophy and Science. Edinburgh, 1996. Smith, R. R. R. Edinburgh, 1996. Smith, R. R. R. h.e.l.lenistic Sculpture. h.e.l.lenistic Sculpture. London, 1991. London, 1991.
Smith, Rowland. Julian's G.o.ds: Religion and Philosophy in the Thought and Action Julian's G.o.ds: Religion and Philosophy in the Thought and Action of Julian the Apostate. of Julian the Apostate. London and New York, 1995. London and New York, 1995.
Sorabji, Richard. Emotion and Peace of Mind: From Stoic Agitation to Christian Emotion and Peace of Mind: From Stoic Agitation to Christian Temptation. Temptation. Oxford, 2000. Oxford, 2000.
---. "Rationality." In Michael Frede and Gisela Striker, eds., Rationality in Rationality in Greek Thought. Greek Thought. Oxford, 1996. Oxford, 1996.
Stark, Rodney. The Rise of Christianity. The Rise of Christianity. Princeton, 1996. Princeton, 1996.
Stead, Christopher. Philosophy in Christian Antiquity. Philosophy in Christian Antiquity. Cambridge, 1994. Cambridge, 1994.
---. "Rhetorical Method in Athanasius." Vigiliae Christianae Vigiliae Christianae 30 (1976): 12137. 30 (1976): 12137.
Stegemann, E. W., and W. Stegemann. The Jesus Movement: A Social History of Its First Century. First Century. Edinburgh, 1999. Edinburgh, 1999.
Steiner, Deborah. The Tyrant's Writ. The Tyrant's Writ. Princeton, 1993. Princeton, 1993.
Straw, Carole. Gregory the Great: Perfection in Imperfection. Gregory the Great: Perfection in Imperfection. Berkeley and London, 1988. Berkeley and London, 1988.
Stroumsa, Guy. Barbarian Philosophy: The Religious Revolution of Early Barbarian Philosophy: The Religious Revolution of Early Christianity. Christianity. Tubingen, 1999. Tubingen, 1999.
Swain, S. h.e.l.lenism and Empire: Language, Cla.s.sicism and Power in the Greek World, A.D. 50250. World, A.D. 50250. Oxford, 1996. Oxford, 1996.
Tallis, Raymond. Enemies of Hope: A Critique of Contemporary Pessimism. Enemies of Hope: A Critique of Contemporary Pessimism. London, 1997. London, 1997.
Tarn, William. Alexander. Alexander. Cambridge, 1948. Cambridge, 1948.
Tarnas, Richard. The Pa.s.sion of the Western Mind. The Pa.s.sion of the Western Mind. London, 1996. London, 1996.
Tarrant, Harold. "Middle Platonism." In Richard Popkin, ed., The Pimlico History The Pimlico History of Western Philosophy. of Western Philosophy. New York, 1998; London, 1999. New York, 1998; London, 1999.
Taylor, Miriam. Anti-Judaism and Early Christian Ident.i.ty. Anti-Judaism and Early Christian Ident.i.ty. Leiden and New York, 1995. Leiden and New York, 1995.
Thomas, Keith. Man and the Natural World: Changing Att.i.tudes in England, Man and the Natural World: Changing Att.i.tudes in England, 15001800. 15001800. London, 1983. London, 1983.
Thomas, Rosalind. Herodotus in Context: Ethnography, Science and the Art of Herodotus in Context: Ethnography, Science and the Art of Persuasion. Persuasion. Cambridge, 2000. Cambridge, 2000.
Thompson, E. A. The Visigoths in the Time of Ulfila. The Visigoths in the Time of Ulfila. Oxford, 1966. Oxford, 1966.
Tilley, Maureen. "Dilatory Donatists or Procrastinating Catholics: The Trial at the Conference of Carthage." In Everett Ferguson, ed., Doctrinal Diversity: Varieties Doctrinal Diversity: Varieties of Early Christianity. of Early Christianity. New York and London, 1999. New York and London, 1999.
Trout, Dennis. Paulinus of Nola: Life, Letters and Poems. Paulinus of Nola: Life, Letters and Poems. Berkeley and London, 1999. Berkeley and London, 1999.
Vaggione, Richard. Eunomius of Cyzicus and the Nicene Revolution. Eunomius of Cyzicus and the Nicene Revolution. Oxford, 2000. Vermes, G. Oxford, 2000. Vermes, G. The Changing Faces of Jesus. The Changing Faces of Jesus. London, 2000. London, 2000.
Wallace, R., and W. Williams. The Three Worlds of Paul of Tarsus. London, 1998. Wardy, Robert. The Birth of Rhetoric. The Birth of Rhetoric. London, 1996. London, 1996.
---. "Rhetoric." In J. Brunschwig and G. E. R. Lloyd, eds., Greek Thought: A Greek Thought: A Guide to Cla.s.sical Knowledge. Guide to Cla.s.sical Knowledge. Cambridge, Ma.s.s., and London, 2000. Cambridge, Ma.s.s., and London, 2000.
Ware, Kallistos. "The Soul in Greek Christianity." In C. Crabbe and M. James, eds., From Soul to Self. From Soul to Self. London, and New York, 1999. London, and New York, 1999.
---. "The Way of the Ascetics, Negative or Affirmative?" In V. Wimbush and R. Valantasis, eds., Asceticism. Asceticism. New York and Oxford, 1995. New York and Oxford, 1995.
Warner, Marina. Alone of All Her s.e.x. Alone of All Her s.e.x. London, 1985. London, 1985.
Weitzmann, K., ed. Age of Spirituality: A Symposium. New York, 1980.
West, Martin. "Early Greek Philosophy." In John Boardman, Jasper Griffin and Oswyn Murray, eds., The Oxford History of the Cla.s.sical World. The Oxford History of the Cla.s.sical World. Oxford, 1986. Oxford, 1986.
Wiles, Maurice. Archetypal Heresy: Arianism Through the Centuries. Archetypal Heresy: Arianism Through the Centuries. Oxford, 1996. Oxford, 1996.
Wilken, R. L. John Chrysostom and the Jews: Rhetoric and Reality in the Late Fourth Century. Fourth Century. Berkeley and London, 1983. Berkeley and London, 1983.
Williams, Bernard. "Philosophy." In M. J. Finley, ed., The Legacy of Greece: A New The Legacy of Greece: A New Appraisal. Appraisal. Oxford, 1984. Oxford, 1984.
Williams, Daniel. Ambrose of Milan and the End of NiceneArian Conflicts. Ambrose of Milan and the End of NiceneArian Conflicts. Oxford, 1995. Oxford, 1995.
Williams, Rowan. "Arianism." In E. Ferguson, ed., Encyclopaedia of Early Christianity. Encyclopaedia of Early Christianity. Chicago and London, 1990. Chicago and London, 1990.
---, ed. The Making of Orthodoxy: Essays in Honour of Henry Chadwick. The Making of Orthodoxy: Essays in Honour of Henry Chadwick. Cambridge, 1989. Cambridge, 1989.
Williams, Stephen. Diocletian and the Roman Recovery. Diocletian and the Roman Recovery. London, 1985. London, 1985.
Wills, Gary. Saint Augustine. Saint Augustine. London and New York, 1999. London and New York, 1999.
Wimbush, V., and R. Valantasis, eds. Asceticism. New York and Oxford, 1995.
Wisch, B., ed. Confraternities and the Visual Arts in Renaissance Italy: Ritual, Confraternities and the Visual Arts in Renaissance Italy: Ritual, Spectacle, Image. Spectacle, Image. Cambridge, 2000. Cambridge, 2000.
Witt, R. Isis in the Greco-Roman World. Isis in the Greco-Roman World. London, 1971. London, 1971.
Wolterstorff, Nicholas. "Faith." In Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London and New York, 2000. London and New York, 2000.
Worthington, Ian, ed. Persuasion: Greek Rhetoric in Action. Persuasion: Greek Rhetoric in Action. London and New York, 1994. London and New York, 1994.
Wood, D., ed. The Church and the Arts. The Church and the Arts. Oxford, 1992. Oxford, 1992.
Young, Frances. "A Cloud of Witnesses." In John Hick, ed., The Myth of G.o.d The Myth of G.o.d Incarnate, Incarnate, 2nd ed. London, 1993. 2nd ed. London, 1993.
---. From Nicaea to Chalcedon. From Nicaea to Chalcedon. London, 1993. London, 1993.
Zanker, Paul. The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus. The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus. Ann Arbor, 1988. Ann Arbor, 1988.
1, 2. Two details from "The Triumph of Faith" by Filippino Lippi, painted in the 1480S for the Dominican church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome. The great Dominican theologian Thomas Aquinas upholds the true faith, while below him the works of heretics lie discarded. The figures below Aquinas include the fourth-century combatants in the dispute, among them Arius and Sabellius, as well as contemporaries of the donor of the fresco, Cardinal Oliviero Carafa (14301511), the cardinal protector of the Dominicans.
Note Constantine's church of St. John Lateran in the view to the left of Aquinas (top) with the famous equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius, then believed to be of Constantine, which is now on the Capitoline Hill. For further discussion of the fresco, see chapter 1. (Credit: Scala) 3, 4. "There is one race of men, one race of G.o.ds, both have breath of life from a single mother . . . so we have some likeness, in great intelligence and strength to the immortals." The poet Pindar, writing in the fifth century B.C., notes the contrasts and similarities between men and the G.o.ds in the Greek world. The Riace warrior (above), which forms part of an Athenian victory monument at Delphi (470s B.C.), represents man at his most heroic, almost a G.o.d in his own right, as the similarity to a portrayal of Zeus in a bronze of the same date (right) makes clear. This was the human world at its most confident, although the Greeks always warned of the impropriety of a mortal attempting to behave as if he were a G.o.d. (Credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection) 5, 6. By the fourth century A.D., such confidence has faded and human beings have become overwhelmed by forces over which they have little control. The gulf between G.o.d and man is now immense. On earth, the ascetic Anthony, here shown on the Isenheim Altar (above), painted for a monastery dedicated to St. Anthony in Alsace by Matthias Grunewald (1515), fights off a host of demons which threaten to overcome him (credit: Bridgeman Art Library). In the afterlife (left), devils drag unlucky souls down into h.e.l.l from the ladder on which they are making the arduous ascent towards heaven (a twelfth-century icon from St. Catherine's Monastery in Sinai; credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection). It was perhaps inevitable in such a climate that creative thinking about the natural world would be stifled.
7. Marcus Aurelius (emperor A.D. 16180) displays himself as one among his fellow humans. Here, in a contemporary panel (C. 17680 A.D.) in Rome, he grants clemency to two kneeling barbarians (credit: Corbis). In his Meditations Meditations, much influenced by Stoicism, Marcus Aurelius stresses his optimism about the natural order of things. "Everything bears fruit: man, G.o.d, the whole universe, each in its proper season. Reason, too, yields fruit, both for itself and for the world; since from it comes a harvest of other good things, themselves all bearing the stamp of reason."
8, 9, 10. By the fourth century the emperor has become quasi-divine, as the monumental idealized head of Constantine (above left), from his basilica in Rome, suggests (credit: Scala). Recent studies of Constantine doubt that he was ever fully converted to Christianity, but aimed instead to bring Christianity, alongside paganism, into the service of the state. His Arch in Rome (315) (top) shows no Christian influence, but one can see in the third line of the inscription the words INSTINCTU DIVINITAS, "by divine inspiration," a use of terminology acceptable to both Christian and pagan (credit: Scala). In a coin of about 330 (above right), Constantine stands between two of his sons (credit: Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna). He receives a circlet directly from G.o.d, a symbol of divine approval of his rule, while Constantius is crowned by Virtus (virtue) and Constantine II by Victoria (victory). In Christian terms, Constantine sees himself as the "thirteenth apostle" and is buried as such.
11, 12, 13. By 390 Christ, here "in majesty" in the church of Santa Pudenziana in Rome (top), has been transformed from an outcast of the empire to one who is represented by its most traditional imperial images, fully frontal on a throne (credit: Scala). The setting echoes the portrayal of Constantine distributing largesse on his Arch (315) (above; credit: Alinari) and of the emperor Theodosius I on a silver commemorative dish of 388 (right; credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection). Note Christ's adoption of a halo, hitherto a symbol of monarchy (while his beard echoes representations of Jupiter). On Christ's left, Paul is introduced as an apostle, an indication of his growing status in the empire of the late fourth century.
14. According to the Gospels, Jesus was executed by Roman soldiers and offered no resistance to them. In imperial Christianity, by contrast, he himself has become a Roman soldier, "the leader of the legions," as Ambrose of Milan put it. With no supporting evidence for this role from the Gospels, the Old Testament Psalm 91, which portrays a protective G.o.d trampling on lion and adder, is drawn on to provide the imagery. (A mosaic from Ravenna, c. 500; credit: Scala) 15. Constantine's use of a military victory as the platform from which to announce his toleration of Christianity was a radical departure which defined the relations.h.i.+p between Christianity and war for centuries to come. The Sala di Constantino was commissioned from Raphael by the Medici pope Leo X (pope 151321). The early popes are shown alongside Constantine's vision. Leo a.s.sociated himself with the victory by adding the palle palle (b.a.l.l.s) from the Medici coat of arms to Constantine's tent; lions, a reference to Leo's name, are also found on the tent, with another depicted on a standard. (Credit: Scala) (b.a.l.l.s) from the Medici coat of arms to Constantine's tent; lions, a reference to Leo's name, are also found on the tent, with another depicted on a standard. (Credit: Scala) 16. "Alexamenos wors.h.i.+ps his G.o.d." Early Christians were ridiculed for their wors.h.i.+p of a "G.o.d" who had suffered the humiliation of crucifixion. In this graffito of c. 200 from Rome, one Alexamenos is mocked for wors.h.i.+pping a donkey on a cross. (Credit: Scala) 17. Even in the fifth century, Christians themselves had inhibitions about representing Christ on the cross, as can be seen in this representation of Christ from the door of the Roman church of Santa Sabina (c. 420). (Credit: Scala) 18. An increasing stress on the sinfulness of the human race led to graphic portrayals of the appalling agonies Christ had to go through to redeem humanity. ("The Crucifixion" from the Isenheim Altar, 1515; credit: Bridgeman Art Library) 19. A further development in the medieval iconography of Jesus was to differentiate him racially from his fellow Jews and to stress their responsibility for the crucifixion by caricaturing them. Note the same differentiation of Veronica, who has just wiped Christ's face with her veil. (Christ Carrying the Cross by Hieronymus Bosch, c. 14501516; credit: Bridgeman Art Library) by Hieronymus Bosch, c. 14501516; credit: Bridgeman Art Library) 20. The motif of the Good Shepherd had been known in eastern and Greek art for over a thousand years before it was adopted for Christ, as here (c. 300; credit: Scala). Constantine is known to have erected emblems of the Good Shepherd on fountains in Constantinople, and in his Life Life Eusebius tells how his troops mourned him as their own "Good Shepherd." This is yet another example of how Constantine manipulated images to sustain consensus between pagan and Christian. Eusebius tells how his troops mourned him as their own "Good Shepherd." This is yet another example of how Constantine manipulated images to sustain consensus between pagan and Christian.
21. Traditional imperial iconography was also adopted as a setting for Christ's life. On the sarcophagus of Junius Ba.s.sus (359) in Rome, Christ is shown in the two central panels; in the upper panel, he appears in divine majesty ruling over the cosmos (in the same pose as an emperor is shown in a relief of 310), and, in the lower, entering Jerusalem, in a format also traditionally used for the arrival of emperors (credit: Scala). There were debates in this period over the relations.h.i.+p between the divine and human aspects of the emperor; here they appear to have been transferred into Christian theology, a forerunner of the great theological disputes over Christ's nature in the decades to come.
22. While Christian art often drew on pagan imagery, it also developed distinctive themes of its own. In this sixth-century ivory from Ravenna, the emphasis is on Christ as miracle worker. The four major miracles shown are (reading counter-clockwise from top left): the Cure of the Blind Man, the Cure of the Possessed Man, the Cure of the Paralytic Man and the Raising of Lazarus. Below Christ are the Three Young Men in the Burning Fiery Furnace from the Old Testament. By the fifth century miracles had become the primary way in which a Christian "holy man" could show authenticity as one favoured by G.o.d; stories of miracles pervade the lives of the saints. (Credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection) 23. We also find an increasing adulation of sacred objects, icons and the relics of saints. Here the bones of St. Stephen, the first Christian martyr, are borne into Constantinople by the patriarch of the city and welcomed by Senate, emperor, Theodosius II, and, probably, his pious sister Pulcheria, in 421. By now Constantinople is a Christian city. An icon of Christ appears at the gate into the imperial palace (upper left) and spectators in the top row of windows of the palace swing incense burners. (Credit: Bridgeman Art Library) 24, 25, 26. G.o.ddesses had been prominent in Mediterranean religion, and the Egyptian Isis, here shown with her son Horus (above left; credit: Bridgeman Art Library) in a fourth-century A.D. limestone statue, was one of the most popular. As Christianity developed the role and status of Mary, she absorbed many of the attributes and iconographies of these G.o.ddesses. By the sixth century the Virgin and child, often accompanied by saints and angels, as in this example from St. Catherine's, Sinai (above right; credit: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin /Preussicher Kulturbesitz / Museum fur Spatantlike und Byzantinische Kunst), is an integral part of Christianity. No one depicts the femininity, and motherhood, of Mary more exquisitely than Caravaggio (15711610), here in his Rest on the Flight into Egypt Rest on the Flight into Egypt (detail, below; Ancient Art and Architecture Collection). (detail, below; Ancient Art and Architecture Collection).
27, 28. However rigid the theological definitions of the church, the boundaries between paganism and Christianity remained fluid. In this mosaic from Cyprus (first half of the fourth century), the G.o.d Dionysus is presented to on-looking nymphs as "a divine child" (above; credit: Scala). Perhaps more astonis.h.i.+ng are the representations of the Virgin Mary produced by the medieval Italian confraternities. Here the confraternity of St. Francis in Perugia shows her protecting the people from the wrath of her son, who is shooting arrows of plague to earth (left; credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection). In Homer's Iliad Iliad, Apollo also spreads plague with his arrows, and the G.o.ddesses Hera and Athena intervene to calm his wrath.
29, 30. One of the major developments of fourth-century Christianity was the adoption of the pagan custom of celebrating G.o.d through magnificent buildings, many of them of great beauty, as the simple basilica of Santa Sabina (top) in Rome (c. 420) suggests (credit: Scala). In a lovely seventh-century mosaic in her church outside Rome (above), Saint Agnes has been transformed by her martyrdom into a Byzantine princess and set against a background of gold (credit: Scala). Two of the popes responsible for building her church (one of the most atmospheric in Rome) surround her.
31, 32, 33. Among the most prominent church builders was the emperor Justinian (52765), here shown with his entourage in the church of San Vitale in Ravenna (top; credit: Scala). His most majestic creation was Santa Sophia in Constantinople, here (above left) in a watercolour by Gaspard Fossati (1852, by which time it had become a mosque; credit: Scala). The ma.s.sive transfer of resources into buildings was justified by Christians on the Platonic grounds that they provided an image on earth of the splendours of heaven. Any sacred object could be encased in gold and jewels, as this ninth-century gospel cover shows (above right; credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection). Well might Jerome complain that "parchments are dyed purple, gold is melted into lettering, ma.n.u.scripts are dressed up in jewels, while Christ lies at the door naked and dying." These underlying tensions erupted, centuries later, during the Reformation, when vast quant.i.ties of Christian art were destroyed by the reformers.
34, 35. This diptych may well have been issued by the Symmachus and Nicomachus families as a memorial to the pagan senator Praetextatus, who died in 384. "He alone," it was said, "knew the secrets of the nature of the G.o.dhead, he alone had the intelligence to apprehend the divine and the ability to expound it." Here a wealth of traditional imagery suggests the resilience of paganism in the late fourth century. See chapter 15 for detailed discussion of the diptych. (Credit: Hirmer) 36. The death of Symmachus, the upholder of freedom of thought against Ambrose of Milan, is commemorated in traditional style in this depiction of his apotheosis (c. 402). He ascends in heroic nudity from the funeral pyre in a four-horse chariot and is then received into heaven. (Credit: Ancient Art and Architecture Collection)
CHARLES FREEMAN.
The Closing of the Western Mind Charles Freeman is the author of The Greek Achievement The Greek Achievement and and Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Egypt, Greece, and Rome. He lives in Suffolk, England. He lives in Suffolk, England.
ALSO BY CHARLES FREEMAN.
Egypt, Greece, and Rome
The Greek Achievement
The Legacy of Ancient Egypt