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Explaining the Cosmos - Creation and Cultural Interaction in Late-Antique Gaza (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,678
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Explaining the Cosmos - Creation and Cultural Interaction in Late-Antique Gaza (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Late Antiquity
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Explaining the Cosmos analyzes the writings of three thinkers
associated with Gaza: Aeneas, Zacharias and Procopius. Together,
they offer a case study for the appropriation, adaptation, and
transformation of classical philosophy in late antiquity, and for
cultural transitions more generally in Gaza. Aeneas claimed that
the "Academy and Lyceum" had been transferred to Gaza. This book
asks what the cultural and intellectual characteristics of the
Gazan "Academies" were, and how members of the schools mixed with
local cultures of Christians, philosophers, rhetoricians and monks
from the local monasteries.
Aeneas, Zacharias and Procopius each contributed to debates about
the creation and eternity of the world, which ran from the
Neoplatonist Proclus into the sixth-century disputes between
Philoponus, Simplicius and Cosmas Indicopleustes. The Gazan
contribution is significant in its own right, highlighting
distinctive aspects of late-antique Christianity, and it throws the
later philosophical debates into sharper relief. Focusing on the
creation debates also allows for exploration of the local cultures
that constituted Gazan society in the late-fifth and early-sixth
centuries. Explainingthe Cosmos further explores cultural dynamics
in the Gazan schools and monasteries and the wider cultural history
of the city. The Gazans adapt and transform aspects of Classical
and Neoplatonic culture while rejecting Neoplatonic religious
claims. The study also analyses the Gazans' intellectual
contributions in the context of Neoplatonism and early
Christianity. The Gaza which emerges from this study is a set of
cultures in transition, mutually constituting and transforming each
other through a fugal pattern of exchange, adaptation, conflict and
collaboration.
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