Verlag: University Of Notre Dame Press Apr 2015, 2015
ISBN 10: 0268035350 ISBN 13: 9780268035358
Sprache: Englisch
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
EUR 69,66
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In den WarenkorbTaschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - The thirteenth-century logician Lambert of Auxerre's Logica, written in the mid-1250s, became an authoritative textbook on logic in the Western tradition. Thomas S. Maloney's translation of Logica is a milestone in the study of medieval logic. More than a translation, Maloney's project is a comprehensive study of Lambert's logic situated in the context of his contemporaries and predecessors.
Verlag: University Of Notre Dame Press Apr 2015, 2015
ISBN 10: 0268036136 ISBN 13: 9780268036133
Sprache: Englisch
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
EUR 82,98
Währung umrechnenAnzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbBuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - It may seem surprising to discover that a Catholic cardinal was a novelist, and Newman advanced this as an obstacle to his own canonization: 'Saints are not literary men,' he wrote, 'they do not love the classics, they do not write Tales.' He was only fit 'to black the saints' shoes-if Saint Philip uses blacking, in heaven.' The background to Loss and Gain was a controversial one. Newman wrote the book in part to provide a title for publication by James Burns, of the later celebrated firm of Burns and Oates, who had lost his stable of Anglican authors by converting in 1847 to Catholicism. An understanding of the novel requires some knowledge of its Oxford background, of the university setting, which was compared in the fierceness of its loyalties by Newman's friend Richard Church to a Renaissance Italian city, implying an assassin with a stiletto round every corner. In short, there is a sense in which, in spite of its fictional character, Loss and Gain is a work of controversy, full of echoes of old battles over whether the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion and the Book of Common Prayer should be interpreted in a 'Catholic' or a 'Protestant' sense. It is a response, like Newman's other works, to a challenge, and so its hero, Charles Reding, as a student in Oxford, passes through the hands of the representatives of a number of Anglican parties and schools of theology before resolving his doubts in Rome.