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Dante and Aquinas : a study of nature and grace in the Comedy /

Christopher Ryan's study of Dante and Aquinas, touching on issues of nature and grace, of explicit and implicit faith, and of desire and destiny, is intended to mark the difference between them in key areas of theological sensibility. Re-shaped and revised by John Took on the basis of papers ma...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Ryan, Christopher, 1943-2004
Otros Autores: Took, J. F.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: London : UCL Arts & Humanities Publications : Ubiquity Press, 2013.
Colección:UCL Arts & Humanities publications.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 1: Morality and Merit
  • Preliminary considerations: Aquinas, grace and grace-consciousness.
  • Patterns of doing and deserving I: Aquinas and movement
  • Patterns of doing and deserving II: Dante and the coalescence of human and divine willing at the core of existence
  • Dante, maturity in the flame of love, and primordial possibility
  • 2: Faith and Facticity
  • Faith as a condition of salvation in Dante and Aquinas: Aquinas, explicit faith and implicit faith
  • Dante and the power of the encounter to regeneration and redemption
  • divine vulnerability and a reconfiguration of soteriological emphases.
  • 3: Desire and Destiny
  • Introduction: the aetiology of desire
  • Aquinas, desiderium naturale and a moment's uncertainty
  • Dante and the coincidence of being and desiring in man
  • Dante and predestination: a preliminary statement
  • Aquinas and destiny under the aspect of transmission
  • Dante and destiny under the aspect of emergence
  • 4. The Augustinian Dimension: Narratives of Succession and Secession
  • Introduction: patterns of affirmation and emancipation
  • Aquinas, Augustine, and the tyranny of the Sed contra
  • Augustinian and non-Augustinian itineraries in Dante: patterns of sameness (the psychology and pathology of dissimilitude) and patterns of otherness (nature, grace and the viability of the human project)
  • Conclusion: Dantean Augustinianism: continuity and discontinuity in the depths
  • Appendix A: Some Disputed Texts in the Commedia
  • Purg. XXII. 55-99: Statius and the dynamics of conversion
  • Par. IV. 124-32: natural desire for the beatific vision
  • Par. XXIX. 64-66: 'Affetto' and the meriting of grace
  • Appendix B: Cruces in Aquinas
  • Divine intervention in the process of deliberation
  • The fundamental option
  • but whose option?
  • Appendix C: Dante on Acquisition
  • Bibliography
  • Index of Names.