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E-raamat: Christians, Gnostics and Philosophers in Late Antiquity

(University of Oxford, UK)
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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?
Preface ix
Acknowledgements xiii
Christians and Pagans in Dispute
I Quoting Aratus: Acts 17,28
269
Zeitschrift fur die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 83, 1992
II Some early Christian immoralities
82(198)
Ancient Society 23, 1992
III Justin's logos and the Word of God
280
Journal of Early Christian Studies 3, 1995
IV Satire and verisimilitude: Christianity in Lucian's Peregrinus
98(130)
Historia 38, 1989
V Xenophanes Christianus?
228(6)
Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 32, 1991
VI Pagan and Christian monotheism in the age of Constantine
234
Approaching Late Antiquity, eds S.C.R. Swain and M.J. Edwards. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004
VII Notes on the date and venue of the Oration to the Saints (CPG 3497)
168
Byzantion 77, 2007
VIII Dracontius the African and the fate of Rome
160
Latomus 63, 2004
Gnostic Thought and its Milieu
IX Gnostics and Valentinians in the Church Fathers
47(3)
Journal of Theological Studies, n.s. 40, 1989
X Neglected texts in the study of Gnosticism
50(171)
Journal of Theological Studies, n.s. 41, 1990
XI Pauline Platonism: the myth of Valentinus
221
Studio Patristica 35, 2001
XII The tale of Cupid and Psyche
94(6)
Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 94, 1992
XIII Porphyry's Cave of the Nymphs and the Gnostic controversy
100(41)
Hermes 124, 1996
Christianity and the Platonic Tradition
XIV Socrates and the early Church
141
Socrates from Antiquity to the Enlightenment, ed. M. Trapp. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007
XV Origen's Platonism. Questions and caveats
38(143)
Zeitschrift fur Antikes Christentum 12, 2008
XVI Ammonius, teacher of Origen
181
Journal of Ecclesiastical History 44, 1993
XVII Birth, death and divinity in Porphyry's Life of Plotinus
71
Greek Biography and Panegyric in Late Antiquity, eds T. Hagg and P. Rousseau. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2000
XVIII Porphyry and the intelligible triad
25(189)
Journal of Hellenic Studies 110, 1990
XIX The figure of love in Augustine and in Proclus the Neoplatonist
214
Downside Review 448, 2009
Index 7
Dr Mark Edwards is University Lecturer in Patristics, and Tutor in Theology, Christ Church, University of Oxford, UK