In his preface to ST. THOMAS AQUINAS, Jacques Maritain writes:<br /><br />This work is not an exposition of Thomist doctrine. Rather, it is an attempt to bring to light certain essential aspects of the personality and work of the Angelic Doctor. For it is not of a medieval Thomism, but of a lasting
St Thomas Aquinas
β Scribed by Vivian Boland OP; Richard Bailey
- Publisher
- Continuum
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 233
- Series
- Continuum Library of Educational Thought
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A major international reference series providing comprehensive accounts of the work of seminal educational thinkers from a variety of periods, disciplines and traditions. It is the most ambitious and prestigious such project ever published - a definitive resource for at least a generation. The thinkers include: Aquinas, Aristotle, Bourdieu, Bruner, Dewey, Foucault, Freire, Holt, Kant, Locke, Montessori, Neill, Newman, Owen, Peters, Piaget, Plato, Rousseau, Steiner, Vygotsky, West and Wollstonecraft. St Thomas Aquinas is indisputably a major thinker in education. Vivian Bolandβs volume offers the most coherent account of Aquinasβs educational thought. This work is divided into: Intellectual biography Critical exposition of Aquinasβs work The reception and influence of Aquinasβs work and The relevance of the work today.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
St. Thomas Aquinas enables the reader to appreciate both Thomas's continuity with earlier thought and his creative independence. After a useful account of the life and work of St. Thomas, McInerny shows how the thoughts of Aristotle, Boethius, and Augustine and Pseudo-Dionysius were assimilated into
Acclaimed by a top Aquinas scholar as "the best book ever written on St. Thomas," this concise, readable narrative profiles one of Christianity's most important and influential thinkers. Chesterton focuses on the man and the events that shaped him, rather than on theology, and illustrates the saint'
<p><span>St. Thomas Aquinas</span><span> enables the reader to appreciate both Thomas's continuity with earlier thought and his creative independence. After a useful account of the life and work of St. Thomas, McInerny shows how the thoughts of Aristotle, Boethius, and Augustine and Pseudo-Dionysius
<p><span>St. Thomas Aquinas</span><span> enables the reader to appreciate both Thomas's continuity with earlier thought and his creative independence. After a useful account of the life and work of St. Thomas, McInerny shows how the thoughts of Aristotle, Boethius, and Augustine and Pseudo-Dionysius