Books
"In this far-reaching essay, historian Michael Edward Moore examines modernity every bit an historical eastward... more than "In this far-reaching essay, historian Michael Edward Moore examines modernity as an historical epoch following the end of the medieval period – and as a "messianic concept of time." In the early twentieth century, a debate over the meaning and origins of modernity unfolded among the philosophers Ernst Cassirer, Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hans Blumenberg. These thinkers tried to resolve the puzzle of the fifteenth-century principal Nicholas of Cusa. Was Cusanus the last neat medieval thinker, his ideas a summa of medieval tradition? Or was he a mysterious epochal figure, seated at i finish of the bridge leading to modern idea? Nicholas of Cusa lived during a time of historical and existential crisis, or kairos, when medieval governments and cherished sources of unity were shaken. Likewise, the debate over his significance took place during a later phase of crisis for Europe, in the decades earlier and after the Second World War, when the collapse of European civilization was witnessed. Moore argues that modernity, so intently examined as an historical and spiritual trouble, has significance for our contemporary sense of crisis."
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At present in paperback. "A well-crafted tale which uses not but varied primary and secondary sources b... more At present in paperback. "A well-crafted tale which uses not simply varied master and secondary sources simply also utilizes structures of space, symbols, language, and cult to illustrate the true roles which bishops play. It is a must read for anyone who studies the tardily antique/early medieval western Europe and the religious and governmental origins contained inside; that it is conspicuously written by a widely read and careful historian makes information technology equally enjoyable as information technology is instructive." ―Comitatus: A Periodical of Medieval and Renaissance Studies
This volume examines the interaction of bishops and kings from the Gallic period of the fourth century to the breakup of the Carolingian Empire in about 850. We come across that kings and bishops powerfully influenced one another, and that the character of Frankish kingship was transformed during the rise of the Carolingian Empire by the ideas, police and ritual activities of bishops. Indeed, the building of the Empire, and the sense of religious mission which inspired it can be attributed to the royal adoption of an episcopal platform. Regal power became ritualized and christianized. Episcopal power was transformed at the same time, because past virtue of living in the Empire they helped create, bishops could human activity on a cross-cultural, even Church-wide level. Published: Cosmic University of America Printing. 2011.http://cuapress.cua.edu/books/viewbook.cfm?book=MOSK
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Papers
Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses , 2003
The liturgical program at Cluny was directed toward a struggle against demons. Demons attacked so... more The liturgical programme at Cluny was directed toward a struggle confronting demons. Demons attacked souls in this world by bringing plague and violence, and in the next world, by punishing sinful souls. This article discusses how concern virtually such demons drew upon an aboriginal tradition regarding the pervasive influence of demons. The monks at Cluny sought to end this demonic tyranny. The battle for souls at Cluny reached a highpoint with the introduction of the Feast of All Souls' Day betwixt 1024 and 1033 by the powerful Abbot Odilo.
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A Companion to Boniface , 2020
The 8th-century English language missionary and church reformer Boniface was a highly influential figur... more The eighth-century English missionary and church reformer Boniface was a highly influential figure in early medieval Europe. His career in what is now Germany, France, and kingdom of the netherlands is attested in an infrequent number of textual sources: a correspondence of 150 letters, Latin poetry, church council records, and other documents. Numerous saints' lives and modern devotional materials further reveal how he was and is remembered past the religious communities that claim him as a foundational figure. This volume comprises the latest scholarship on Boniface and his fellow missionaries, examining the written materials associated with Boniface, his impacts on the regions of Europe where he worked (Hessia, Thuringia, Bavaria, Frisia, and Francia), and the development of his cult in the Middle Ages and today. Readership Anyone interested in history of early medieval England, Francia, Federal republic of germany, missionaries, church building history, canon law, hagiography, Anglo-Latin literature, mod cults of the saints in Europe; (post-)graduate students, specialist and not-specialist historians.
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Nicholas of Cusa and the Making of the Early Modern World , 2019
In this essay, questions of tradition and crisis, tradition and kairos, arise in several contexts... more In this essay, questions of tradition and crunch, tradition and kairos, ascend in several contexts: the historical context of Nicholas of Cusa, who as a highly placed intellectual and Fundamental of the Church building during the Renaissance period wanted to ensure that the truths and institutions of the Catholic church would survive during a period of ecclesiastical crunch, by taking strength through reform – and in the scholarship of Ernst Cassirer, who looked back to the Renaissance period from the vantage bespeak of a destructive, dangerous menstruation of historical turmoil in Weimar Germany. Cassirer studied the Renaissance period as part of his search for the origins of modern philosophy. He also sought confirmation of the possibility that philosophy could provide orientation and guidance for thought in regard to the human status and the modernistic experience of historical trauma. Aslope these lofty aims, as a scholar he hoped to center the study of the history of ideas in the details of cultural history, rather than seeing intellectual life as an aerial realm in which ideas link only to other ideas.
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Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Congress of Medieval Catechism Law, Paris , 2016
The posthumous trial of Pope Formosus in 897, known every bit the Cadaver Synod, is said to recap a ... more The posthumous trial of Pope Formosus in 897, known as the Cadaver Synod, is said to epitomize a period of disintegration in ecclesiastical history. The corpse of Pope Formosus was taken from its grave, deposed during a trial, disrobed, mutilated, and thrown into the Tiber River. The trial occurred in an atmosphere of political extremism and of taboo-breaking in Rome. Occurring during the demise of the Carolingian world order, ca. 888-900, the trial demonstrated that traditional sources of unity, and the norms of purple-papal cooperation, were in crisis. The discord culminated in the reprisal of Pope Stephen against his predecessoron the Encounter of Peter, Formosus. The trial sheds an uncanny light on legal culture, religious life and political mentality in fin-de-siècle papal Rome, with its deviant use of ecclesiastical law, and its revival of the Roman do of damnatio memoriae. This paper examines : the events of the trial, its basis in papal theory and canon constabulary, the charges against Pope Formosus, and the political climate that made such a trial thinkable. Pope Formosus died in April 896. Nine months later on, in January 897, his successor, Pope Stephen Half-dozen (VII) had the body taken from its grave and put on trial, by an assembly of clerics : an result which came to be known every bit the Cadaver Synod. The event coincided with a menstruum of rivalry and military disharmonize among newly emerging kings in the post-Carolin-gian world. After the collapse of the Carolingian dynasty in 888, the traditional restraints on violence were weakened ane. Such violence was not entirely unprecedented, only outbreaks of violence now reached the centers and regions dominated by Frankish royal power 2. Malcontents of the former authorities had their twenty-four hours in the sun, and old resentments came to the surface three. The trial unfolded like this : The corpse of Formosus was removed from its grave, dressed in papal regalia, and propped upwards on a throne. There, before an assembly of clerics, charges were leveled against the body of the erstwhile pope, with Pope Stephen VI (Vii), who controlled the event, taking the atomic number 82. A deacon was appointed to answer on behalf of Formosus. Of form the result was non in doubt. Formosus was convicted, and all his acts declared invalid. Co-ordinate to Liutprand of Cremona, the fingers used to make the sign of episcopal blessing were cut from his correct paw, to demonstrate the nullification
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Robes and Honor: The Medieval World of Investiture, ed. Stewart Gordon. New York: St. Martin's / Palgrave, 2000. , 2000
This essay discusses the conceptual parallels betwixt regal and episcopal clothing in the early on grand... more This essay discusses the conceptual parallels between royal and episcopal clothing in the early medieval period.
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The American Benedictine Review , 2009
Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times mendacious world of medieval history to pro... more Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times deceitful earth of medieval history to provide disquisitional sources for the study of church history. Thus he helped to establish medieval studies as a scientific subject.
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The American Benedictine Review , 2009
Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times deceitful world of medieval history, to pr... more than Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times deceitful world of medieval history, to provide disquisitional editions of ecclesiastical sources, thereby helping to establish medieval studies on a scientific basis.
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Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law , 2008
The Messages of Boniface reveal a fascination with law, and contain many legal texts and notices o... more than The Messages of Boniface reveal a fascination with law, and contain many legal texts and notices of legal events. The letters published the records of councils, and can thus be understood as legal documents. The messages were collected considering of their importance for ecclesiastical history, and because they served equally a source of law.
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Betwixt Sword and Prayer: Warfare and Medieval Clergy in Cultural Perspective, edited by Radoslav Kotecki, Jacek Maciejewsky, Jon S. Ott (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2017), pp.46-87.
Breaking with a centuries-long tradition of disharmonize between Franks and Saxons, Charlemagne turne... more than Breaking with a centuries-long tradition of conflict between Franks and Saxons, Charlemagne turned to forced conversion and de-Saxonisation.
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The ascension of mod information technology over the past century has coincided with a steady decli... more The rise of modern information
engineering over the past century has coincided with a steady
decline of traditional methods of learning and estimation, and
has contributed to the full general sense of "worldlessness" or anomie. In
the words of Paul Ricoeur, "we are overwhelmed past a alluvion of words,
past polemics, by the assault of the virtual, which today create a kind of
opaque zone." Philology, the ancient discipline that grew in the past
two centuries to comprehend literary study, linguistics, and intellectual
history, was originally conceived every bit a return to the by with the aim
of retrieving the knowledge of bygone times. While the contempo revival
of involvement in philology recognizes its importance to the humanities,
it remains unnamed equally such. The aim of my exploration of the history
and practices of philology is to suggest how it can reinstate the
presence of the past. With its attentiveness to linguistic communication—undertaken
in the silent spaces of private study, archive, and library—philology
non just confirms the presence
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Ecclesia et Violentia: Violence against the Church building and Violence within the Church in the Middle Ages
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This paper examines the connection betwixt canon constabulary of the Carolingian Middle Ages and the legac... more This paper examines the connection betwixt canon law of the Carolingian Eye Ages and the legacy of ecclesiastical history. How did patristic studies, and an awareness of the Christian past, inform the assembled bishops of councils?
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Biblical Interpretation 22 (2014) 71-89
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Millenium. Jahrbuch zu Kultur und Geschichte des ersten Jahrtausends north. Chr. / Yearbook on the Civilization and History of the First Millenium C.E. , 2012
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Bède le Vénérable entre tradition et postérité. The Venerable Bede. Tradition and Posterity. Edited by Stéphane Lebecq, Michel Perrin and Olivier Szwerwiniack, 199-208. Lille: CEGES, 2005
https://books.openedition.org/irhis/340?lang=en
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Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary
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"In this far-reaching essay, historian Michael Edward Moore examines modernity equally an historical eastward... more than "In this far-reaching essay, historian Michael Edward Moore examines modernity as an historical epoch following the finish of the medieval period – and every bit a "messianic concept of time." In the early twentieth century, a fence over the meaning and origins of modernity unfolded among the philosophers Ernst Cassirer, Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hans Blumenberg. These thinkers tried to resolve the puzzle of the fifteenth-century master Nicholas of Cusa. Was Cusanus the last great medieval thinker, his ideas a summa of medieval tradition? Or was he a mysterious epochal figure, seated at one end of the bridge leading to modern thought? Nicholas of Cusa lived during a time of historical and existential crisis, or kairos, when medieval governments and cherished sources of unity were shaken. Besides, the debate over his significance took place during a later phase of crisis for Europe, in the decades before and after the Second Earth War, when the plummet of European civilization was witnessed. Moore argues that modernity, so attentively examined equally an historical and spiritual problem, has significance for our contemporary sense of crisis."
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At present in paperback. "A well-crafted tale which uses non only varied chief and secondary sources b... more than At present in paperback. "A well-crafted tale which uses not merely varied master and secondary sources only also utilizes structures of space, symbols, language, and cult to illustrate the truthful roles which bishops play. It is a must read for anyone who studies the late antique/early medieval western Europe and the religious and governmental origins contained within; that it is clearly written by a widely read and conscientious historian makes it equally enjoyable equally information technology is instructive." ―Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies
This volume examines the interaction of bishops and kings from the Gallic period of the fourth century to the breakup of the Carolingian Empire in about 850. We see that kings and bishops powerfully influenced ane another, and that the grapheme of Frankish kingship was transformed during the rise of the Carolingian Empire by the ideas, police and ritual activities of bishops. Indeed, the edifice of the Empire, and the sense of religious mission which inspired information technology tin be attributed to the majestic adoption of an episcopal platform. Imperial power became ritualized and christianized. Episcopal ability was transformed at the aforementioned fourth dimension, because by virtue of living in the Empire they helped create, bishops could human action on a cantankerous-cultural, even Church building-wide level. Published: Catholic University of America Press. 2011.http://cuapress.cua.edu/books/viewbook.cfm?book=MOSK
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Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses , 2003
The liturgical programme at Cluny was directed toward a struggle against demons. Demons attacked and so... more The liturgical program at Cluny was directed toward a struggle against demons. Demons attacked souls in this globe by bringing plague and violence, and in the side by side globe, by punishing sinful souls. This article discusses how concern nigh such demons drew upon an ancient tradition regarding the pervasive influence of demons. The monks at Cluny sought to cease this demonic tyranny. The battle for souls at Cluny reached a highpoint with the introduction of the Banquet of All Souls' Day between 1024 and 1033 by the powerful Abbot Odilo.
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A Companion to Boniface , 2020
The eighth-century English language missionary and church reformer Boniface was a highly influential figur... more The eighth-century English missionary and church reformer Boniface was a highly influential figure in early medieval Europe. His career in what is now Federal republic of germany, France, and the netherlands is attested in an infrequent number of textual sources: a correspondence of 150 messages, Latin poetry, church council records, and other documents. Numerous saints' lives and modern devotional materials farther reveal how he was and is remembered by the religious communities that claim him as a foundational effigy. This volume comprises the latest scholarship on Boniface and his fellow missionaries, examining the written materials associated with Boniface, his impacts on the regions of Europe where he worked (Hessia, Thuringia, Bavaria, Frisia, and Francia), and the development of his cult in the Middle Ages and today. Readership Anyone interested in history of early medieval England, Francia, Federal republic of germany, missionaries, church history, canon law, hagiography, Anglo-Latin literature, modernistic cults of the saints in Europe; (post-)graduate students, specialist and non-specialist historians.
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Nicholas of Cusa and the Making of the Early Modernistic Globe , 2019
In this essay, questions of tradition and crisis, tradition and kairos, arise in several contexts... more In this essay, questions of tradition and crisis, tradition and kairos, arise in several contexts: the historical context of Nicholas of Cusa, who as a highly placed intellectual and Cardinal of the Church during the Renaissance period wanted to ensure that the truths and institutions of the Cosmic church would survive during a menstruum of ecclesiastical crisis, past taking strength through reform – and in the scholarship of Ernst Cassirer, who looked dorsum to the Renaissance period from the vantage betoken of a destructive, dangerous catamenia of historical turmoil in Weimar Germany. Cassirer studied the Renaissance menses as part of his search for the origins of modern philosophy. He likewise sought confirmation of the possibility that philosophy could provide orientation and guidance for idea in regard to the human being status and the modern experience of historical trauma. Alongside these lofty aims, as a scholar he hoped to middle the study of the history of ideas in the details of cultural history, rather than seeing intellectual life equally an aerial realm in which ideas link only to other ideas.
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Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Congress of Medieval Canon Police force, Paris , 2016
The posthumous trial of Pope Formosus in 897, known as the Cadaver Synod, is said to epitomize a ... more The posthumous trial of Pope Formosus in 897, known every bit the Cadaver Synod, is said to epitomize a catamenia of disintegration in ecclesiastical history. The corpse of Pope Formosus was taken from its grave, deposed during a trial, disrobed, mutilated, and thrown into the Tiber River. The trial occurred in an temper of political extremism and of taboo-breaking in Rome. Occurring during the demise of the Carolingian world gild, ca. 888-900, the trial demonstrated that traditional sources of unity, and the norms of imperial-papal cooperation, were in crisis. The discord culminated in the reprisal of Pope Stephen confronting his predecessoron the See of Peter, Formosus. The trial sheds an uncanny lite on legal culture, religious life and political mentality in fin-de-siècle papal Rome, with its deviant use of ecclesiastical law, and its revival of the Roman practice of damnatio memoriae. This paper examines : the events of the trial, its ground in papal theory and catechism law, the charges against Pope Formosus, and the political climate that made such a trial thinkable. Pope Formosus died in April 896. Nine months after, in January 897, his successor, Pope Stephen VI (Vii) had the body taken from its grave and put on trial, past an associates of clerics : an event which came to be known every bit the Cadaver Synod. The event coincided with a menstruum of rivalry and military conflict among newly emerging kings in the post-Carolin-gian globe. After the collapse of the Carolingian dynasty in 888, the traditional restraints on violence were weakened 1. Such violence was not entirely unprecedented, merely outbreaks of violence now reached the centers and regions dominated by Frankish royal power 2. Malcontents of the former regime had their day in the sun, and sometime resentments came to the surface 3. The trial unfolded like this : The corpse of Formosus was removed from its grave, dressed in papal regalia, and propped up on a throne. There, before an assembly of clerics, charges were leveled against the body of the former pope, with Pope Stephen Six (VII), who controlled the issue, taking the lead. A deacon was appointed to answer on behalf of Formosus. Of course the outcome was not in doubt. Formosus was bedevilled, and all his acts declared invalid. According to Liutprand of Cremona, the fingers used to brand the sign of episcopal blessing were cut from his correct manus, to demonstrate the nullification
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Robes and Honour: The Medieval World of Investiture, ed. Stewart Gordon. New York: St. Martin's / Palgrave, 2000. , 2000
This essay discusses the conceptual parallels between royal and episcopal wearable in the early m... more than This essay discusses the conceptual parallels between royal and episcopal clothing in the early medieval period.
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The American Benedictine Review , 2009
Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times mendacious world of medieval history to pro... more Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times mendacious globe of medieval history to provide critical sources for the study of church history. Thus he helped to establish medieval studies as a scientific field of study.
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The American Benedictine Review , 2009
Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times mendacious world of medieval history, to pr... more Jean Mabillon departed from the contentious, at times deceitful globe of medieval history, to provide critical editions of ecclesiastical sources, thereby helping to found medieval studies on a scientific basis.
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Message of Medieval Catechism Law , 2008
The Messages of Boniface reveal a fascination with police force, and contain many legal texts and notices o... more than The Letters of Boniface reveal a fascination with police force, and contain many legal texts and notices of legal events. The letters published the records of councils, and can thus exist understood as legal documents. The letters were collected because of their importance for ecclesiastical history, and considering they served as a source of law.
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Between Sword and Prayer: Warfare and Medieval Clergy in Cultural Perspective, edited by Radoslav Kotecki, Jacek Maciejewsky, Jon Southward. Ott (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2017), pp.46-87.
Breaking with a centuries-long tradition of disharmonize between Franks and Saxons, Charlemagne turne... more Breaking with a centuries-long tradition of conflict between Franks and Saxons, Charlemagne turned to forced conversion and de-Saxonisation.
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The rise of modern information engineering science over the past century has coincided with a steady decli... more The rise of mod data
technology over the past century has coincided with a steady
decline of traditional methods of learning and interpretation, and
has contributed to the full general sense of "worldlessness" or anomie. In
the words of Paul Ricoeur, "we are overwhelmed by a flood of words,
past polemics, by the attack of the virtual, which today create a kind of
opaque zone." Philology, the aboriginal discipline that grew in the past
two centuries to encompass literary study, linguistics, and intellectual
history, was originally conceived as a render to the by with the aim
of retrieving the cognition of bygone times. While the recent revival
of interest in philology recognizes its importance to the humanities,
it remains unnamed as such. The aim of my exploration of the history
and practices of philology is to suggest how it can reinstate the
presence of the by. With its attentiveness to language—undertaken
in the silent spaces of private study, archive, and library—philology
non simply confirms the presence
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Ecclesia et Violentia: Violence confronting the Church and Violence within the Church building in the Eye Ages
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This newspaper examines the connection between catechism law of the Carolingian Centre Ages and the legac... more This paper examines the connectedness between canon law of the Carolingian Heart Ages and the legacy of ecclesiastical history. How did patristic studies, and an sensation of the Christian past, inform the assembled bishops of councils?
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Biblical Interpretation 22 (2014) 71-89
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Millenium. Jahrbuch zu Kultur und Geschichte des ersten Jahrtausends n. Chr. / Yearbook on the Culture and History of the Starting time Millenium C.Due east. , 2012
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Bède le Vénérable entre tradition et postérité. The Venerable Bede. Tradition and Posterity. Edited by Stéphane Lebecq, Michel Perrin and Olivier Szwerwiniack, 199-208. Lille: CEGES, 2005
https://books.openedition.org/irhis/340?lang=en
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Glossator: Exercise and Theory of the Commentary
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postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural … , Jan 1, 2010
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Annuarium Historiae Conciliorum (AHC) , Jan 1, 2007
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Principles for studying the intellectual history of the Middle Ages
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A basic introduction to the Life and idea of Emmanuel Lévinas, presented in the cloister of Ne... more A basic introduction to the Life and thought of Emmanuel Lévinas, presented in the cloister of New Melleray. A discussion of certain key themes: the face of the other, ethics, and the prototype of God in human being. The 2d lecture concerns the interest of Lévinas in the Jewish tradition, in a philosophy that begins from Jerusalem, rather than Athens.
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Unpublished - Library of Congress - 2000
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"Lectura sine nomine (Future Philology)." "He loved old colour, the golden glaze of fourth dimension" - Henry... more than "Lectura sine nomine (Future Philology)." "He loved old color, the golden glaze of time" - Henry James Long ago as certain spirits reacted to the world, their jiff became language on ancient tongues and was captured with the scratching of pens. For the history of concepts, Begriffsgeschichte, the study of words and their meanings comes to the fore, seeing language as the inner life of history. It seems truthful to say with Van Gelderen that "For the study of history language is the house of being." As an ancient practice, philology is well-suited to the study of old relics of language and the exploration of various abandoned houses of pregnant. "
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Erasmus Studies , 2019
Martin engages with Erasmus on an historical and philosophical level. A thoughtful and valuable due west... more than Martin engages with Erasmus on an historical and philosophical level. A thoughtful and valuable work.
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Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte , 2019
Review of a major new piece of work on the origins of holy war.
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Speculum , 2017
An fantabulous book on an of import topic: Merovingian royal women as portrayed by Gregory of Tours.
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The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms , 2017
This deeply researched history of royalty and monarchical government in France and England over t... more This deeply researched history of royalty and monarchical government in France and England over the form of a crucial century is vital reading for all historians of politics, political thought, religion, or culture ,1587 to 1688. Sacral kingship was revived in this menstruum. The book connects the rise of intense and divisive religious belief to the rise of political violence and regicide.
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The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms , 2015
A review of the Dante Encyclopedia: a brilliant and indispensable enquiry tool.
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With this work of philosophical theology Johannes Hoff hopes to recover an ecclesial framework f... more With this piece of work of philosophical theology Johannes Hoff hopes to recover an ecclesial framework for life, and along the way, to reexamine old categories such as Christian learning, sensus communis and liturgical infinite. The book traces a self-described "Ultra-Orthodox" itinerary – influenced by the Radical Orthodoxy of John Milbank and Catherine Pickstock. Beyond that, the book aims at null less than the overthrow of the "nihilistic rationality of western modernity," and the modern world pic.
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European Legacy
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Los Angeles Review of Books
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Historical presence, Secondariness
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past Radosław Kotecki, Jacek Maciejewski, John Due south . Ott, Geneviève Bührer -Thierry, Michael Edward Moore, Chris Dennis, Craig M Nakashian, Pablo Dorronzoro Ramírez, Robert Houghton, Monika Michalska, Lawrence Duggan, and Ivan Majnarić
'Betwixt Sword and Prayer' brings together various studies on the interest of medieval Europea... more 'Betwixt Sword and Prayer' brings together various studies on the involvement of medieval European clergy in warfare and military activities, spanning a broad geographical range and multiple interpretive perspectives, including legal, literary, historical, and hagiographical approaches.
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A volume of photographs expressing the theme of silence in landscape and compages.
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weemsmusupothers.blogspot.com
Source: https://uiowa.academia.edu/MichaelEdwardMoore
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