scholarly journals “I Need to Be Individually Loved, Lord, Let Me Recognize Your Gift!”: The Gifts of Love in the Soliloquy of Hugh of Saint-Victor (d. 1141)

Speculum ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-185
Author(s):  
Ritva Palmén
Keyword(s):  
2010 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 81
Author(s):  
César RAÑA DAFONTE

This paper presents a lesson given by three master teachers in the first half of the XIIth century: Honorius of Autun, Hugh of Saint Victor, William of Conches. The three of them were magistri and leading writers. The lesson is about the relevance of study and intellectual education. It is divided in three parts, and each part was given by one of the three above mentioned master teachers.


Religions ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob Holsinger Sherman

Early modernity tended to appeal to the trope of the book of nature as a way of securing knowledge—including knowledge about God—against the exigencies of history and culture, but as theorists such as Timothy Morton, Bruno Latour, and others have argued, today this assumed dualism of nature and culture is both ecologically and critically suspect. What might it mean to read the book of nature in a time of ecological precarity, what many have called the Anthropocene? I will argue that premodern theological traditions of the book of nature, such as one finds in the twelfth century Hugh of Saint Victor, have something extremely important to add to a postmodern ‘terrestrial’ hermeneutics of nature, precisely because the premodern book of nature already performs the construal of nature as culture (and of culture as nature) so often recommended today by critics such as Latour, Haraway, and others. On such an account, nature is neither a fantasy object to be ignored or fled, nor a stable text to be tamed, rationalized, and epistemically leveraged, but rather the changing concept and experience of nature is a symbol illuminated in a book we half receive, and half create, a symbol open to both critique and contemplation, which gives rise to thought, action, and the sort of novel moral intuitions we need now more than ever.


Parergon ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 241-243
Author(s):  
Toby Burrows
Keyword(s):  

1994 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 169-177
Author(s):  
Marjorie Chibnall

Among the works of John of Salisbury the short, unfinished treatise that we call the Historia Pontificalis represents his only incursion into the writing of conventional history.’ Indeed even this, like the Metalogicon, Policraticus and Entheticus, bears the stamp of his unique individual approach to any branch of thought; and to call it conventional is little more than a polite bow of acknowledgement to the graceful preface in which he passes it off as merely another continuation of the world chronicle stretching from the Old Testament through Eusebius and Jerome to Sigebert of Gembloux and Hugh of Saint-Victor in his own age.


2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-84
Author(s):  
James Arinello
Keyword(s):  

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