ERIGENA, JOHN SCOTUS

skōˈtəs ĕrĭjˈĭnə [Lat. Scotus=Irish, Erigena=born in Ireland], c.810–c.877, scholastic philosopher, born in Ireland. About 847 he was invited by Charles II, king of the West Franks (later Holy Roman emperor), to take charge of the court school at Paris. At Charles's request he translated the writings of Pseudo-Dionysius and his commentator Maximus the Confessor. His own philosophical speculation is contained in the De divisione naturae and the fragmentary De egressu et regressu animae ad Deum. Erigena was perhaps the most learned man of his time and a remarkable thinker. His thought, based on that of Pseudo-Dionysius, Maximus the Confessor, the Greek Fathers, and St. Augustine, is Neoplatonic. Philosophy and theology are identified; all thinking and being begin and end with God, who is above all being and thought. Erigena makes a fourfold division of the things that are, or nature—that which creates and is not created; that which is created and creates; that which is created and does not create; that which neither creates nor is created. The first is God, the source of all things. The second is the Logos, existent in, and coeternal with, God, in whom are the primordial causes and types of things. The third is the world of space, time, and generation, which came into being from the primordial causes by emanation through the successive genera and species. The fourth is again God, but regarded now as the end of all things; for just as creatures have emanated from God, so they will return to Him.

See study by D. Moran (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Erigena John Scotus  - 316 results

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...Gardner, Studies in John the Scot Erigena : A Philosopher of the...Henry Bett, Johannes Scotus Erigena: A Study in Medieval...Homily on the Prologue of John; see Eriugena Oxford...Moran, The Philosophy of John Scottus Eriugena: A...
...Quintons section Duns Scotus and Scotism is part of...unfair to Duns. It was John Duns Scotus (c.1266-1308...British philosopher since Erigena and perhaps the most...49 Quinton points to Scotus fertile innovations of...
Compton, John, 259-60 Cooley, Charles Horton...70-71, 73, 171, 183, 255 Dewey, John, 27-28, 31, 103, 107, 122, 201...261-63, 268, 276mi Epictetus, 198 Erigena, John Scotus, 195, 249 Ethics. See McDermott...
...barbarian invaders. Finally, according to the promise of the fitful gleams of the first renaissance of Alcuin and John Scotus Erigena, the second renaissance burst into flower. Of it the eleventh century is the springtime, the twelfth, the summer...
...Middle Ages, at each stage in the preparation of what we call the Renaissance, the Great Renaissance -- with John Scotus Erigena in the ninth century, with the great mystics of the thirteenth, and finally with Marsilio Ficino and others at...
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journal articles on: Erigena John Scotus  - 5 results

 
 
...Vol. 79, No. 4, Fall 2005. John Scotus Eriugena: A Christian Philosopher...article discusses the development of John Scotus Eriugenas teaching on the spiritual...as well as in the Periphyseon, John Scotus understands the spiritual body...
...he had lectured successfully on the Gospel of John at Keble, Illingworth the philosopher had failed...cause convincingly: Irenaeus, Thomas, Duns Scotus, Augustine, John Scotus Erigena, Hugh of St. Victor, and Bonaventure. Most...
...Origen and the Cappadocian Church Fathers, Johannes Scotus Erigena, John of Ruysbroeck, and William Blake, finding in them...surrender to depression and indifference. The monk John Cassian would add here another feature that he called...
...are also significant Christian parallels. John 1: 18: "No man has ever seen God". Johannes Scotus (Erigena): "God does not know Himself, what He...The Zen Teaching of Hui Hai , trans. John Blofeld (London: Rider and Co., 1969...
...century protoscholastic Scotus Erigena with the aim of forestalling...reason departs from that of John Locke and his successors...Roman Catholic convert John Henry Newman, does indeed...those lives themselves. John Dowell is a North American...


 

magazine articles on: Erigena John Scotus  - 1 result

 
 
...Ayin, Nothingness. We encounter this bizarre term among Christian mystics as well: John Scotus Erigena calls God nihil; Meister Eckhart, nichts; St. John of the Cross, nada. To call God "Nothingness" does not mean that God does not exist...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Erigena John Scotus  - 6 results

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ERIGENA, JOHN SCOTUS sko t s erij in Lat. Scotus =Irish, Erigena =born in Ireland, c.810 c.877, scholastic philosopher, born in Ireland. About 847 he was invited by Charles II, king of the West Franks (later Holy Roman emperor...
JOHN SCOTUS see Duns Scotus, John ; Erigena, John Scotus . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
SCOTUS see Erigena, John Scotus ; Duns Scotus . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...through the writings of Boethius . John Scotus Erigena continued the tradition of Neoplatonism...condemnation by Bernard of Clairvaux . John of Salisbury , an English scholar...Another opponent of Aquinas was Duns Scotus , who developed a new scholastic...
...writers Paul the Deacon , Rabanus Maurus Magnentius , and John Scotus Erigena ; the poets Walafrid Strabo and Gottschalk, and Waltharius...Magnus , and St. Thomas Aquinas , together with Duns Scotus , William of Occam , and others. The simple Latin dialogues...
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