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First published in 1970. What is a work of art? What is the status
of things in pictures and books? How are we to distinguish and
ascertain the meaning of a literary work at various levels? This
book is intended both to introduce the reader to classic
philosophical accounts of art and beauty, and to bring out the
significance for aesthetics of recent developments in philosophy.
First published in 1970. What is a work of art? What is the status
of things in pictures and books? How are we to distinguish and
ascertain the meaning of a literary work at various levels? This
book is intended both to introduce the reader to classic
philosophical accounts of art and beauty, and to bring out the
significance for aesthetics of recent developments in philosophy.
Over the last four decades, the focus of M. Douglas Meeks's work
has placed him at the centre of many of the most important
developments in theological reflection and education. As a
political, ecclesial, and metaphorical theologian, Meeks has given
witness to the oikonomia of the triune God, the Homemaker who
creates the conditions of Home for the whole of creation, in
critical conversation with contemporary economic, social, and
political theory. The essays of this volume were written to honour
Meeks, Cal Turner Chancellor Professor Emeritus of Theology at
Vanderbilt University Divinity School, by addressing the theme of
God's economy of salvation from biblical, historical, ecclesial,
and theological perspectives. In an age of ecological devastation
and economic injustice, Meeks teaches us how to place our hope - as
disciples of Jesus, as members of local congregations, as stewards
of institutional life, and as global citizens - in God's power for
life over death through Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit. These
essays will serve to enliven and clarify this hope for the sake of
the world God so loves.
In On the Soul 3.1-8, Aristotle first discusses the functions
common to all five senses, such as self-awareness, and then moves
on to Imagination and Intellect. This commentary on Aristotle's
text has traditionally been ascribed to Philoponus, but William
Charlton argues here that it should be ascribed to a later
commentator, Stephanus. (The quotation marks used around his name
indicate this disputed authorship.) 'Philoponus' reports the
postulation of a special faculty for self-awareness, intended to
preserve the unity of the person. He disagrees with 'Simplicius',
the author of another commentary on On the Soul (also available in
this series), by insisting that Imagination can apprehend things as
true or false, and he disagrees with Aristotle by saying that we
are not always free to imagine them otherwise than as they are. On
Aristotle's Active Intellect. 'Philoponus' surveys different
interpretations, but ascribes to Plutarch of Athens, and rejects,
the view adopted by the real Philoponus in his commentary on
Aristotle's On Intellect that we have innate intellectual knowledge
from a previous existence. Instead he takes the view that the
Active Intellect enables us to form concepts by abstraction through
serving as a model of something already separate from matter. Our
commentator further disagrees with the real Philoponus by denying
the Idealistic view that Platonic forms are intellects. Charlton
sees 'Philoponus' as the excellent teacher and expositor that
Stephanus was said to be.
The earlier part of the commentary by 'Philoponus' on Aristotle's
On the Soul is translated by William Charlton in another volume in
the series. This volume includes the latter part of the commentary
along with a translation of Stephanus' commentary on Aristotle 's
On Interpretation. It thus enables readers to assess for themselves
Charlton's view that the commentary once ascribed to Philoponus
should in fact be ascribed to Stephanus. The two treatises of
Aristotle here commented on are very different from each other. In
On Interpretation Aristotle studies the logic of opposed pairs of
statements. It is in this context that Aristotle discusses the
nature of language and the implications for determinism of opposed
predictions about a future occurrence, such as a sea-battle. And
Stephanus, like his predecessor Ammonius, brings in other
deterministic arguments not considered by Aristotle ('The Reaper'
and the argument from God's foreknowledge). In On the Soul 3.9-13,
Aristotle introduces a theory of action and motivation and sums up
the role of perception in animal life. Despite the differences in
subject matter between the two texts, Charlton is able to make a
good case for Stephanus' authorship of both commentaries. He also
sees Stephanus as preserving what was valuable from Ammonius'
earlier commentary On Interpretation, while bringing to bear the
virtue of greater concision. At the same time, Stephanus reveals
his Christian affiliations, in contrast to Ammonius, his pagan
predecessor.
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