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Milton's scriptural theology : confronting De doctrina Christiana /

A close reading of Milton's De Doctrina, which reveals the personal dimension of his theology and the passion and energy of his mind.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Hale, John K. (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Leeds : Arc Humanities Press, [2019]
Colección:Borderlines (Leeds, England)
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Half-title; Series Information; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; Abbreviations; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Part 1. Materials; Chapter 2. Axioms; Unstated Assumptions; Protestantism; Chapter 3. The Biblical Citations; Citing Scripture; Omissions; Selections; Changes and Additions; Additions; Predestination; Eloquence; Chapter 4. Working from Wollebius; Doctrina; Simple Intensification; Quirks; Personal Experience; Reductiveness; Unconscious Emphasis: Prudence and Prohairesis; Working It Out, Then Shrugging It Off (I.17 and 18); Departing from Wolleb
  • Chapter 5. Named Theologians as InterlocutorsThe Listing; Frequency and Incidence; Erasmus and Beza; Placaeus; Junius in De Filio; Seldenus; Zanchius; Cameron; Polanus; Luther and Calvin; Ludovicus Capellus; Amesius; Conclusions; Part 2. Arts of Language; Chapter 6. Philology; Haeresis and Haereticus (Epistle, MS 4, Oxford, 8); Invalidations; Natura and Fatum; Elohim; Singulars and Plurals Continued (I.5, MS 69i, Oxford, 166-67); Analusai (I.14, MS 179i, Oxford, 456-57); Persona (I.5 and I.14; MS 54 and 190-91; Oxford, 138-39 and 480-81); Incompatibles: Onah versus Res Turpis; Onah
  • Res TurpisWhat Else?; Chapter 7. The Pagan Allusions; Aristotle; Euripides; Homer; Greek Prose; Virgil Continued; Ovid; Horace; Conclusions; Chapter 8 Person to Person-How Pronouns Contribute; Grammar and Idioms; Pronouns as Voices in the Chapters: Second-Person Fictions; Second-Person Fictions (Continued); Intermingling of Third-Person Expressions; Questions of Belonging; "Our" Religion; Amesius Noster; Conclusions; Part 3. Trinity; Chapter 9. Milton's De Filio; Scriptural Evidence: The Road Not Taken; The Preface; Generation; How Style Contributes; Wordplay; Repetition; Eristic
  • The RhetoricThe Johannine Comma (MS 59m, Oxford, 149); The Prize Passage: Locus Palmarius; Glimpsing the Alternative; Chapter 10. Theologies Compared; Hail, Holy Light ... ; Actions and Theses; Contrast Not the Only Relation; John Creaser's View; The Underlying Question; The Personal Impetus; The Person within the Theology; The Man in the Style; Appendix 1: Further Etymologies; Semper esse (I.2; MS 14i, Oxford, 36); Satan (I.9); Pepoithesis (MS 250f/251i, Oxford, 584, in I.20); Ekklesia (MS 366i, Oxford, 770)
  • Clerus (I.29, MS 380, with Oxford, 788-89 with 793n.xi, and also MS 417m, Oxford, 842-43, with 853n.xv)Iusiurandum; Blasphemia, Blasphemare (MS 561, II. 6, Oxford, 1028-29); Sabbath (MS 573i, II. 7, Oxford, 1044); Usury (II. 14, MS 681i, Oxford, 1182); Appendix 2: Hobbes and Dryden; Hobbes; Dryden; Reason; Paul; Father Simon's Critical History of the Old Testament; Bibliography; Primary Texts; Secondary Texts; Index