Did God care? : providence, dualism, and will in later Greek and early Christian philosophy

دانلود کتاب Did God care? : providence, dualism, and will in later Greek and early Christian philosophy

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کتاب آیا خدا اهمیت داد؟ مشیت، دوگانگی و اراده در فلسفه یونانی متاخر و مسیحیت اولیه نسخه زبان اصلی

دانلود کتاب آیا خدا اهمیت داد؟ مشیت، دوگانگی و اراده در فلسفه یونانی متاخر و مسیحیت اولیه بعد از پرداخت مقدور خواهد بود
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نام کتاب : Did God care? : providence, dualism, and will in later Greek and early Christian philosophy
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : آیا خدا اهمیت داد؟ مشیت، دوگانگی و اراده در فلسفه یونانی متاخر و مسیحیت اولیه
سری : Studies in Platonism, Neoplatonism, and the Platonic tradition. Volume 25
نویسندگان :
ناشر : Brill
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 419
ISBN (شابک) : 9789004432994 , 900443299X
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


‎Contents
‎Acknowledgments
‎Abbreviations
‎Author’s Note on Translations and References
‎Introduction
‎Part 1. Providence
‎Chapter 1. The Pronoia Problem(s)
‎1. Introduction: Did the Gods Care?
‎2. The First ‘Likely Stories’ about Providence: From the Presocratics to Plato
‎3. Epicurus, Aristotle, and (Pseudo-)Aristotle: “What Difference Is There …?”
‎4. “Call Him Providence. You Will Still Be Right”: The Stoa on God
‎5. “What Do I Care? For I Have Done My Part”: The Stoa on Fate and Determinism
‎6. Three Providences! Pseudo-Plutarch and the Doctrine of ‘Conditional Fate’
‎7. Conclusions: Aesop and Xanthus in the Weeds
‎Chapter 2. Which God Cares for You and Me?
‎1. Introduction: The Personal God of Early Christianity?
‎2. Philosophers’ Personal Gods: Daimonic Intervention in the Stoa and Plutarch
‎3. Fortune’s Favorites: Providence in Early Roman Historians
‎4. A Different God, Present and Absent in Hellenistic Jewish Literature
‎5. “So You Do Not Neglect the Nation of the Jews after All!”: Philo of Alexandria
‎6. Flavius Josephus: Providential History is Jewish History
‎7. Prayer or Care?—Justin Martyr and Trypho the Jew ‘Investigate the Deity’
‎8. Conclusions: A God Personal Enough for a Stoic
‎Part 2. Dualism
‎Chapter 3. The Other Gods
‎1. Introduction: Dualism in Doubt
‎2. Matter, Evil, and Dualism from the Pythagoreans to a Neo-Pythagorean
‎3. ‘Mitigated Dualism’ and Jewish Apocalyptic Literature
‎4. Athenagoras on “the Archon over Matter and Material Things”
‎5. Living Idols and Questions That Deserve Punishment according to Clement of Alexandria
‎6. “Nothing Happens without God”: Origen on Evil, Demons, and Other Absences
‎7. Marcion asks, “Doth God Clothe the Grass?”
‎8. Conclusions: ‘Religious Dualism’ in Roman Philosophy
‎Chapter 4. Did God Care for Creation?
‎1. Introduction: Gnostics without ‘Gnosticism’?
‎2. No Idle Hands: The Creation-Theology of Irenaeus of Lyons
‎3. Archons and Providences at Work in Creation: ‘On the Origin of the World’ and the ‘Apocryphon of John’
‎4. “These Senseless Men Claim That They Ascend above the Creator …”
‎5. “The Will of the Father” and the ‘Tripartite Tractate’
‎6. Conclusions: The Gnostics on Providence, Creation, and ‘Gnosticism’
‎Part 3. Will
‎Chapter 5. Did God Know All Along?
‎1. Introduction: Origen ‘On Fate’ (Philocalia 23)
‎2. Origen’s Digression on Divine Omniscience and Future Causes in ‘On Fate’
‎3. Chrysippus and Cicero on “Things That Are Simple, Others Complex”: The Oracle to Laius
‎4. Upholding the Appearance of Civic Piety: Alexander of Aphrodisias and Alcinous Respond to the ‘Oracle to Laius’
‎5. Origen’s Oracles to Laius—and David, against Marcion
‎6. Conclusions: ‘The Book of Heaven’
‎Chapter 6. What We Choose Now
‎1. Introduction: Where Does Free Will Emerge in Ancient Philosophy?
‎2. Aristotle on Action and Pseudo-Plutarch on Determinism
‎3. “All These Things Depend on One’s Thinking”: Autonomy and Fatalism in the ‘Book of the Laws of the Countries’
‎4. “Say Anything Rather Than Call Providence Bad”: Clement of Alexandria against Basilides the False
‎5. Origen ‘On Free Will’ (Princ. 3.1), “Older Causes,” and Gnostic Determinism
‎6. Conclusions: Birth, Death, and Eden
‎Chapter 7. How God Cares
‎1. Introduction: The One’s Providence, Will, and Omniscience
‎2. “Neither Actuality nor Thought before It”: Plotinus (Enn. 6. 7–8 [38–39]) and the ‘Tripartite Tractate’ on the Knowledge and Will of the Good
‎3. Plotinus ‘On Providence’ (Enn. 3.2–3 [47–48]): Another Engagement with the ‘Tripartite Tractate’?
‎4. The “Unspeakable First Thought” according to Porphyry and the Anonymous Commentary on Plato’s ‘Parmenides’
‎5. ‘First Thought’ and Providence in the ‘Platonizing’ Sethian Treatises of Nag Hammadi
‎6. Conclusions: A Christianizing Turn in Platonist Conceptions of Divine Foreknowledge
‎Conclusions
‎Bibliography
‎Index




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