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The God Who Is Beauty

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An insightful exercise in theological aesthetics, exploring how Beauty came to be appropriated as a name for God in the Christian theological tradition.In the beginning was beauty, and beauty was w...
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  • 25 September 2014
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An insightful exercise in theological aesthetics, exploring how Beauty came to be appropriated as a name for God in the Christian theological tradition.

In the beginning was beauty, and beauty was with God, and beauty was God. If the tradition of divine names, that (in its Christian form) originates with Dionysius the Areopagite and includes among its ranks Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, and others, is correct in identifying God with the name beauty, then repurposing the Prologue to John's Gospel in this way seems hardly controversial. For if beauty is a divine name then not only is it fitting to say God is beautiful, but it is equally fitting to say that God is beauty itself. However, like most arguments from fittingness-that is to say, arguments whose veracity derives from the congruency, proportion, or harmony between the various elements of a proposition or idea rather than from some categorically higher, or univocally determinate, logical necessity-the simplicity of its utterance stands in stark contrast to the complexity of its intelligible content.

It is the aim of the present work is to explore what it means to say that beauty is a divine name.
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Price: $39.95
Pages: 400
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Clarke
Publication Date: 25 September 2014
Trim Size: 9.02 X 6.02 in
ISBN: 9780227174296
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
This is a brilliant book on both Dionysus's On the Divine Names and Thomas Aquinas' commentary; it hammers in a final nail that forces modernity to re-configure its understanding of the relation between Greek and Medieval philosophy.
— Patrick Madigan

Broad in scope and richly laden with references to original texts, Sammon's book is an impressive and important achievement.
— Declan Lawell
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part One
1. Beauty and the Divine in Ancient Greek Philosophy: Plato and Aristotle
2. Beauty and the Divine in Neoplatonism: Plotinus and Proclus

Part Two
3. The Tradition of the Divine Names
4. Beauty as a Divine Name in Dionysius the Areopagite I: Beauty as Transcendent Plenitude
5. Beauty as a Divine Name in Dionysius the Areopagite II: Beauty as a Principle of Determination
6. Beauty and the One

Part Three
7. The Passage of Dionysius into the Latin West
8. The Journey of Beauty as a Divine Name: From the Sixth to the Thirteenth Century
9. Beauty as a Divine Name in Albert the Great
10. Thomas Aquinas and the Tradition of the Divine Names
11. Beauty as a Divine Name in Thomas Aquinas: In de Divinis Nominibus Expositio
12. Beauty as a Divine Name in Thomas Aquinas: Beyond the Commentary on the Divine Names
13. Conclusion: Beauty as the Between

Bibliography
Index of Names