<p>Against the dominant contemporary options of usefulness and disinterestedness, this dissertation attempts to display that beauty is better--more fully, richly, generatively--described with the categories of fittingness and gratuity. By working through texts by Gregory of Nyssa, this dissertation fills out what fittingness and gratuity entail--what, that is, they <italic>do</italic> for beauty-seekers and beauty-talkers. After the historical set-up of the first chapter, chapter 2 considers fittingness and gratuity through Gregory's doctrine of God because Beauty, for Gregory, is a name for God. That God is radically transcendent transforms (radicalizes) fittingness and gratuity away from a strictly Platonic vision of how they might functi...
This dissertation approaches the concept of beauty. Looking through the consistent efforts ofphiloso...
A hermeneutic of unity between beauty and virtue, inspired by the work of Gregory of Nazianzus, offe...
“We talk about Beauty each time we enjoy something for the mere fact that that something exists” (U....
In this article, the notion of 'desire' is critically interpreted in terms of the classic theologica...
Degree Awarded: Ph.D. Philosophy. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation investigates w...
Thesis advisor: Boyd Taylor CoolmanMany vaunt the Summa halensis, conceived but not drafted entirely...
Does beauty have an inherent association with the divine? If so, what sort of impact does such a cla...
This article will demonstrate why beauty is an important value for the Christian faith. This is done...
Man does not live by bread alone ... Human life embraces more than just \u27living\u27 (material ...
This is an 18,500 word bibliography of philosophical scholarship on Beauty which was published onlin...
<p>The article investigates the potential of mysticism to revitalise theology. It firstly trac...
Hans Urs von Balthasar’s interpretation of Karl Barth’s theology of beauty remains the dominant one ...
Moving from the problem of defining how medieval speculation conceived the aesthetic dimension of ar...
The aim of this project is to articulate the significance of embodiment in the theological doctrine ...
“Where is the beauty in my professional life?” seems a precious and inauthentic question. We are ske...
This dissertation approaches the concept of beauty. Looking through the consistent efforts ofphiloso...
A hermeneutic of unity between beauty and virtue, inspired by the work of Gregory of Nazianzus, offe...
“We talk about Beauty each time we enjoy something for the mere fact that that something exists” (U....
In this article, the notion of 'desire' is critically interpreted in terms of the classic theologica...
Degree Awarded: Ph.D. Philosophy. The Catholic University of AmericaThis dissertation investigates w...
Thesis advisor: Boyd Taylor CoolmanMany vaunt the Summa halensis, conceived but not drafted entirely...
Does beauty have an inherent association with the divine? If so, what sort of impact does such a cla...
This article will demonstrate why beauty is an important value for the Christian faith. This is done...
Man does not live by bread alone ... Human life embraces more than just \u27living\u27 (material ...
This is an 18,500 word bibliography of philosophical scholarship on Beauty which was published onlin...
<p>The article investigates the potential of mysticism to revitalise theology. It firstly trac...
Hans Urs von Balthasar’s interpretation of Karl Barth’s theology of beauty remains the dominant one ...
Moving from the problem of defining how medieval speculation conceived the aesthetic dimension of ar...
The aim of this project is to articulate the significance of embodiment in the theological doctrine ...
“Where is the beauty in my professional life?” seems a precious and inauthentic question. We are ske...
This dissertation approaches the concept of beauty. Looking through the consistent efforts ofphiloso...
A hermeneutic of unity between beauty and virtue, inspired by the work of Gregory of Nazianzus, offe...
“We talk about Beauty each time we enjoy something for the mere fact that that something exists” (U....