![]() |
Saint Augustine and the Fall of the Soul Beyond O'Connell and His Critics - Printable Version +- Softwarez.Info - Software's World! (https://softwarez.info) +-- Forum: Library Zone (https://softwarez.info/Forum-Library-Zone) +--- Forum: E-Books (https://softwarez.info/Forum-E-Books) +--- Thread: Saint Augustine and the Fall of the Soul Beyond O'Connell and His Critics (/Thread-Saint-Augustine-and-the-Fall-of-the-Soul-Beyond-O-Connell-and-His-Critics) |
Saint Augustine and the Fall of the Soul Beyond O'Connell and His Critics - ebooks1001 - 03-09-2025 ![]() Free Download Saint Augustine and the Fall of the Soul: Beyond O'Connell and His Critics By Ronnie J. Rombs 2006 | 228 Pages | ISBN: 081321436X | PDF | 1 MB Augustine's understanding of the origin of the soul and the nature of its fall looms as one of the most important and controversial questions among Augustinian scholars since Robert J. O'Connell first began publishing on the topic. O'Connell argued that Augustine embraced Descriptioninus's doctrine that the soul existed before the body and only fell into bodily life as the result of sin. Such a position, however, is fundamentally incompatible with Christian anthropology: bodily life is intrinsically corrupted; physical existence is regrettable. The supposition that the most influential Christian theologian after St. Paul maintained such a position generated sharp division between scholars who were convinced by O'Connell and those who were not. A scholarly consensus on the subject has not yet developed. provides first a critical examination of O'Connell's theses in a readable summary of his work that spanned over thirty years. Secondly, a diachronic study of Augustine's writings traces the development of his understanding of the soul's fall, mapping the limits of Descriptioninus's influence. The study recognizes the extent to which Augustine embraced Descriptioninus's ontology and anthropology and the point at which he abandoned Descriptioninus. The young Augustine was significantly influenced by Descriptioninus, and there is substantial evidence that he held a Descriptioninian doctrine of the soul's fall. But as the anthropological implications that follow from the Christian doctrine of creation ex nihilo became apparent to him, Augustine departed from Descriptioninus. Augustine ultimately took the soul's fall to be a moral lapse, retaining Descriptioninus's imagery vocabulary as a way of expressing a psychology of sin, not an ontological fall. Augustinian scholars and students in theology and patristics will find the text an invaluable resource on the topic. Recommend Download Link Hight Speed | Please Say Thanks Keep Topic Live Links are Interchangeable - Single Extraction |