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Book Number   000244518
ISBN   Link9780195309386 (cloth)
  Link0195309383 (cloth)
  Link9780195309393 (pbk.)
  Link0195309391 (pbk.)
Main Entry   LinkVisser, Sandra,, 1965-
Title   LinkAnselm / Sandra Visser and Thomas Williams.
Imprint   LinkOxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2009.
Descr.   xii, 303 p. ; 21 cm.
Series   ( Great medieval thinkers)
Bibliogr.   Includes bibliographical references (p. [293]-298) and index.
Contents   The reason of faith -- Thought and language -- Truth -- The Monologion arguments for the existence of God -- The Proslogion argument for the existence of God -- The divine attributes -- Thinking and speaking about God -- Creation and the Word -- The Trinity -- Modality -- Freedom -- Morality -- Incarnation and atonement -- Original sin, grace, and salvation.
Abstract   Sandra Visser and Thomas Williams offer a brief, accessible introduction to the life and thought of St. Anselm (c. 1033-1109). Anselm, who was Archbishop of Canterbury for the last 16 years of his life, is unquestionably one of the foremost philosopher-theologians of the Middle Ages. Indeed he may have been the greatest Christian thinker in the 800 years between Augustine and Aquinas. His keen and rigorous thinking earned him the title ’The Father of Scholasticism.’ The influence of his contributions to ethics and philosophical theology is clearly discernible in figures as various as Thomas Aquinas, John Duns Scotus, the voluntarists of the late-thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and the Protestant Reformers. The prevalence of self-identified Anselmians - and anti-Anselmians - in contemporary philosophy of religion attests to the enduring importance of his approach to the divine nature. Visser and Williams’s book falls into two main parts. The first will elucidate Anselm’s metaphysics, concluding with an examination of Anselm’s account of truth, which serves as a capstone for his metaphysical system. The second part focuses on Anselm’s theory of knowledge.Topics considered include Anselm’s general account of cognition and his odd but compelling theory of language-acquisition and the role it plays in discourse about the divine. The third section of the book is devoted to the moral life.
  Anselm’s account of the foundations of ethics is philosophically of great interest, the authors show, because it effectively combines insights that contemporary philosophers have thought to be antithetical. In the fourth and last section, they turn to Anselm’s philosophical explorations of Christian doctrine, including Redemption, the Trinity, and the Incarnation. They show how Anselm puts his metaphysical system to work in establishing the coherence of Christian doctrine and explain how his philosophical theol
Per.Sub.   LinkAnselm, Saint, Archbishop of Canterbury,, 1033-1109
Add.Entry   LinkWilliams, Thomas, 1967-
Series AE-Uni.Title   LinkGreat medieval thinkers.
 
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