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The book will be of interest to students of Medieval Philosophy,
Theology, Spirituality and their place within Cultural History.
The medieval Christian West's most radical practitioners of a
Neoplatonic, negative theology with a mystical focus are John
Scottus Eriugena, Meister Eckhart and Nicholas Cusanus. All three
mastered what Cusanus described as docta ignorantia: reflecting on
their awareness that they could know neither God nor the human
mind, they worked out endlessly varied attempts to express what
cannot be known. Following Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, they
sought to name God with symbolic expressions whose negation leads
into mystical theology. For within their Neoplatonic dialectic,
negation moves beyond reason and its finite distinctions to
intellect, where opposites coincide and a vision of God's infinite
unity becomes possible. In these papers Duclow views these
thinkers' efforts through the lens of contemporary philosophical
hermeneutics. He highlights the interplay of creativity, symbolic
expression and language, interpretation and silence as Eriugena,
Eckhart and Cusanus comment on the mind's work in naming God. This
work itself becomes mystical theology when negation opens into a
silent awareness of God's presence, from which the Word once again
'speaks' within the mind - and renews the process of creating and
interpreting symbols. Comparative studies with Gregory of Nyssa,
Pseudo-Dionysius, Anselm and Hadewijch suggest the book's wider
implications for medieval philosophy and theology.
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