TY - BOOK ID - 17229419 TI - To know God and the soul : essays on the thought of Saint Augustine PY - 2008 SN - 9780813214870 0813214874 PB - Washington, D.C.: Catholic university of America press, DB - UniCat KW - Knowledge, Theory of (Religion) KW - Augustine, KW - Avgustin, Blazhennyĭ, KW - Augustinus, Aurelius, KW - Augustyn, KW - Augustin, KW - Ughasṭīnūs, KW - Agostino, KW - Agustí, KW - Augoustinos, KW - Aurelius Augustinus, KW - Augustinus, KW - Agustín, KW - Aurelio Agostino, KW - Episkopos Ippōnos Augoustinos, KW - Augoustinos Ipponos, KW - Agostinho, KW - Aurelli Augustini, KW - Augustini, Aurelli, KW - Aurelii Augustini, KW - Augustini, Aurelii, KW - Ōgostinos, KW - Agostino, Aurelio, KW - אוגוסטינוס הקדוש KW - أغسطينوس، KW - 奥古斯丁 KW - Avgustin, KW - Augustinus, Aurelius KW - Agostinho KW - Augustine of Hippo KW - Augustine d'Hippone KW - Agostino d'Ippona KW - Augustin d'Hippone KW - Augustinus Hipponensis, sanctus KW - Sant'Agostino KW - Augustinus van Hippo KW - Aurelius Augustinus KW - Aurelio Agostino KW - 聖アウグスティヌス KW - アウグスティヌス KW - Augustine KW - Augustine, - Saint, Bishop of Hippo UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:17229419 AB - To Know God and the Soul presents a collection of essays on Augustine of Hippo written over the past twenty-five years by renowned philosopher Roland Teske. They reveal Teske's principal interests in Augustine, especially Augustine's discovery of a spiritualist metaphysics in the philosophy of Plotinus that allowed him to break away from Manichean and Stoic corporealism so that he could conceive of God as incorporeal and non-temporal and of the soul as incorporeal. Augustine's assimilation of Plotinian thought as a means of understanding Catholic Christianity provided key answers to some of the problems that he had had with the Christian faith, but it also led to other problems because some aspects of Platonism were incompatible with the Christian faith, as can be seen in Augustine's early account of the love of neighbor and in his understanding of the motive of creation. The articles focus on Augustine's philosophical thought and language about God, his argument for the existence of God, properties of God such as his substantiality and immutability, the creation of the world in time along with the question raised by the Manichees about what God was doing before he created the world. They tie the definition of time in the Confessions to the concept of a world-soul, which Augustine held at least in the years up to the Confessions. They offer an explanation of the unity of the Confessions, especially through an appeal to Augustine's interpretation of the heaven of heaven, and point to the salvific role of Christ who, according to Augustine, came to free us from time and make us eternal. In addition to a short general introduction, each of the articles is accompanied by a brief reflection in which the author has followed the bishop of Hippo's lead by providing a retractatio, in which he reexamines the articles from his present-day perspective. ER -