Description
About the Author
Kim Paffenroth is professor of religious studies and the director of the Honors Program at Iona College.
John Doody is professor of philosophy and Robert M. Birmingham chair in humanities
at Villanova University.
Alexander R. Eodice is professor of philosophy and chair of the Philosophy Department at Iona College.
Reviews
This wide-ranging and provocative collection of essays highlights the many connections between Augustine and Wittgenstein on language, memory, confession, and religion. While it was W. himself who said that A. was one of his favorite writers (along with Kierkegaard and Dostoevsky), exactly why that is so and how that admiration expresses itself in his writing has never before been so clearly and broadly presented as in this collection. I found myself understanding better each author through the other. This book is a must read for anyone interested in either of these deeply original and profoundly personal thinkers, or simply in thinking about the eternal questions that they raise.
-- John Verdi, St. John's CollegeWittgenstein, who thought religiously but not from within a religion, had, to say the least, a complex debt to Augustine, whose surprisingly unsettled religiosity still manages to disturb the peace of a secular aesthetic. The ten essays that comprise Augustine and Wittgenstein stake out the terms of their arresting conjunction in inventive ways. There is no single paradigm of approach that the writers follow: along the way, we get manicured lawns, hot-house flowers, wild germinations, and ambiguous weeds. This is philosophy at the edge of reverence. Dig in.
-- James Wetzel, Professor of Philosophy and Augustinian Endowed Chair, Villanova UniversityThis excellent collection of essays is poised to become the standard first resource for scholars and students examining connections between Augustine and Wittgenstein. These ten essays (one classic and nine newly written for the volume) address a diverse set of problems linking the two thinkers, including Wittgenstein's interpretation of Augustine, the role of ostention in language learning, difficulties concerning meaningful speech about ultimate reality, the perception and interpretation of miracles, human sexuality and the ritual imagination, the origins of religiosity, the relation between time and memory, and understanding the recalcitrant will. The collection provides a much needed scholarly resource for those interested in Wittgenstein's relation to Augustine as well as creative and critical examination of links and divergences between the two philosophers.
-- Thomas D. Carroll, Chinese University of Hong KongBook Information
ISBN 9781498585286
Author Kim Paffenroth
Format Paperback
Page Count 216
Imprint Lexington Books
Publisher Lexington Books
Weight(grams) 331g
Dimensions(mm) 222mm * 151mm * 16mm