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Renowned philosopher Kurt Flasch offers a full-scale reappraisal of
the life and legacy of Meister Eckhart, the medieval German
theologian, philosopher, and alleged mystic who was active during
the Avignon Papacy of the fourteenth century and was tried for
heresy by Pope John XXII. Disputing his subject's frequent
characterization as a hero of a modern, syncretic spirituality,
Flasch attempts to free Eckhart from the "Mystical Flood" by
inviting his readers to think along with Eckhart in a careful
rereading of his Latin and German works. This fascinating study
makes a powerful case for Eckhart's position as an important
philosopher of the time rather than a mystic and casts new light on
an important figure of the Middle Ages whose ideas attracted
considerable attention from such diverse modern thinkers as
Schopenhauer, Vivekananda, Suzuki, Fromm, and Derrida.
In 1350, the Italian humanist and poet Francesco Petrarca
(Petrarch) decided to form a collection of all his correspondence.
The letters deal with multifatious topics, switch between narration
and instruction, and the personal and the general, and are
addressed to various of his learned friends and contemporaries.
They are a treasure trove for the history of ideas. This is the
first complete German-language edition of the famous 24 books of
the Epistolae familiares; they have been translated from the Latin
by Prof. Berthe Widmer, an acknowledged authority on Petrarch. The
translation is accompanied by a detailed commentary on the texts,
giving factual information on aspects which are largely unknown
today, for example on persons, authors and places mentioned. Access
to the letters is further facilitated by an annotated index of the
addresses and an overview of the contents of the letters. A
detailed introduction locates the letters in the context of
Petrarch's complete works and his age. The letters represent a most
important document in the history of literature and are of
inestimable value for all literary scholars and for historians and
historians of philosophy.
Der Kulturhistoriker Erich Auerbach (1892-1957) zAhlt zu den
bedeutendsten Kulturwissenschaftlern und Romanisten des 20.
Jahrhunderts. Wie viele andere bedeutende Gelehrte emigrierte er
frA1/4h aus Deutschland, um der Verfolgung durch die
Nationalsozialisten zu entgehen. Bereits 1929 erschien sein Buch zu
Dante, das trotz des etwas komplizierten Titels einen runden
GesamtA1/4berblick A1/4ber das dichterische Schaffen des
italienischen Nationaldichters gibt. Auerbach spA1/4rte in der
GAttlichen KomAdie, Dantes Hauptwerk, viele Realismen auf.
RA1/4ckbezA1/4ge auf die Welt des Irdischen bleiben auch im Grauen
der HAlle, in der Hoffnung des Fegefeuers und in der religiAsen
Ekstase des Paradieses deutlich. Dante schildert beispielsweise
viele Zeitgenossen und ihre SA1/4nden, die dann entsprechend
gebA1/4At werden. Bei Auerbach wird das Universum Dantes
eindrucksvoll lebendig.
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