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Absolute Beginners

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Absolute Beginners adopts a variety of approaches to study the Absolute as the ultimate source of knowledge in medieval philosophy. From a historical perspective, it examines a forerunner of Spinoz...
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  • 21 September 2007
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Absolute Beginners adopts a variety of approaches to study the Absolute as the ultimate source of knowledge in medieval philosophy. From a historical perspective, it examines a forerunner of Spinoza’s departure from the Absolute in the Ethics: the doctrine of God as a first object in the generation of knowledge, as formulated by Henry of Ghent (†1293) and Richard Conington (†1330). Methodologically, it offers a case-study in the construction of an historical object, calling into question the self-evident and spontaneous way in which elements in the history of philosophy - its concepts and theories - are presented as primary givens. In a systematic sense, this study includes a reflection on structural indeterminacy, as pervading and stabilizing the differential system of exclusions which makes up the doctrine of God as a first object in the generation of knowledge.
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Price: $173.00
Pages: 294
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studien und Texte zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters
Publication Date: 21 September 2007
ISBN: 9789004162150
Format: Hardcover
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Wouter Goris, Ph.D. (1997) in Philosophy, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, taught at the Thomas-Institut in Cologne and is currently Professor of Ancient, Patristic and Medieval Philosophy at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. He has published extensively on medieval ontology including his work Einheit als Prinzip und Ziel: Versuch über die Einheitsmetaphysik des Opus tripartitum Meister Eckharts (Brill, 1997).