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The cardinal virtues in the Middle Ages [electronic resource]

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Despite its non-Christian origins, the scheme of the cardinal virtues (prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance) found wide acceptance in medieval theology, philosophy, and religious literature. The present study is the first to investigate the history of the four virtues in the Latin Middle Ages from patristic times to the late fourteenth century. It examines the position of the cardinal virtues between religious and secularized conceptions of morality and attempts to reveal some distinctly Christian aspects of medieval virtue theory notwithstanding its manifest indebtedness to ancient ethics. Exploring learned and popularizing sources alike, including much unedited material, this study covers a broad spectrum of moral debate during ten centuries of Western intellectual history.

Title The cardinal virtues in the Middle Ages [electronic resource] : a study in moral thought from the fourth to the fourteenth century / by István P. Bejczy.
Publisher Leiden
Boston : Brill
Creation Date 2011
Notes Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
English
Content Preliminary Material / I. Bejczy -- 1. Patristic Era And Early Middle Ages (C. 400–C. 1100) / I. Bejczy -- 2. The Twelfth Century / I. Bejczy -- 3. The Thirteenth And Fourteenth Centuries / I. Bejczy -- 4. Fallen Man In Search Of Virtue / I. Bejczy -- Conclusion / I. Bejczy -- Appendix I. Some Current Classifications Of The Moral Virtues / I. Bejczy -- Appendix II. Some Unedited Medieval Texts On The Cardinal Virtues / I. Bejczy -- Bibliography / I. Bejczy -- Index Of Manuscripts / I. Bejczy -- Index Of Ancient And Medieval Authors And Major Anonymous Works / I. Bejczy.
Series Brill's studies in intellectual history, 0920-8607
v. 202
Extent 1 online resource (369 p.)
Language English
National Library system number 997010705779505171
MARC RECORDS

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