New York,: Hawthorn Books (
1960)
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Abstract
Who were the mean that created the great systems of Christian philosophy in the Middle Ages? How did their thoughts and methods differ from the philosophers who preceded and followed them in history? The author answers these questions by describing the men and outlining the particular greatness that constitutes medieval Christian philosophy. He shows the influence of the ancient Greek and Roman philosophers, of the Jewish and Arabian thikers, and of the religious revelations and doctrines to which the Christian philosophers were dedicated. In all this volume presents a handy, compact outline of the scholastics and their religious philosophy.