The Beginning: A study in the Greek philosophical approach to the concept of Creation from Anaximander to St John
โ Scribed by Arnold Ehrhardt
- Publisher
- Manchester University Press
- Year
- 1968
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 236
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The philosophical question of the โbeginningโ has been widely neglected for centuries, especially by Christian theologians. Nevertheless, a long history of controversy lies behind the revolutionary assertion of the Fourth Gospel, โIn the beginning was the Word.โ It is with this controversy that this study is concerned.
Dr Ehrhardt begins by claiming that Goethe was one of the few people who have seen the significance of the Fourth Gospel reference to โarcheโ. This leads to the Pythagoreans and raises the whole problem of the history of โarcheโ. If the Greek view of the world was that it was eternal, how should St Johnโs audience (which obviously was Greek) react to his opening words โIn the beginningโ? That such a statement as St Johnโs did not startle his readers means that, unconventional as this statement was, the subject was very much in the air. The problem of the discussion of โarcheโ is traced by the author through the Hellenistic collections of ancient wisdom. He shows how the concept plays an important part in Pythagoreanism and undergoes a transformation in the work of Parmenides, before going on to discuss the views of Anaxagoras, Democritus and Aristotle.
The second part of the book contains an account of how the idea of the โbeginningโ was understood in Hellenistic philosophy. The emergence of a theory of creatio ex nihilo is carefully mapped out and the difficult problem of the Greek quality of these ideas is illumined, as is also the close relation between philosophical and mythical cosmogonies. The author then refers to the history of magic before coming finally to the Fourth Gospel.
This book should be of considerable interest to Biblical scholars and to historians of philosophy but also to non-specialists interested in the history of ideas.
โฆ Table of Contents
Arnold Ehrhardt: a memoir
by J. HEYWOOD THOMAS, vii
Preface, xiii
- Prelude, 1
DR FAUSTUS, ST JOHN, AND PALAIPHATUS
Part One: The classical philosophers from the Pre-Socratics to Aristotle
2. The origin of the Greek idea of the โbeginningโ, 17
3. Orphics and Pythagoreans, 28
4. The Pre-Socratics of the fifth century B.C., 56
PARMENIDES
5. Anaxagoras and the atomists, 69
6, Plato, 87
7. Aristotle, 107
Part Two: The โbeginningโ in the philosophy of creation during the Hellenistic period until the Fourth Gospel
8. Summary of the earlier development, 143
9. Hellenistic developments of the doctrine of the โbeginningโ, and the creatio ex nihilo, 154
10. Hellenistic creation myths, 172
11. The โbeginningโ in late Judaism and early Christianity, 190
Index, 206
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