In this Book

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Love and Friendship in the Western Tradition comprises a collection of essays written over a 25 year period by the late Rev. Professor James McEvoy on the theme of friendship. The book traces the genesis and development of philosophical treatments of friendship from Greek philosophy, through the Middle Ages, to modern and postmodern philosophy. The collection’s three major concerns are: (1) the history of philosophical discussions of friendship; (2) the role of friendship in the cultivation of the philosophical life; (3) the marginalization of friendship as a theme for philosophical reflection and practice in the modern period. As the author was primarily a medievalist, a great deal of the focus of the essays is on the development of the theme of friendship in the Middle Ages (in the thought of Augustine, Aquinas, Aelred of Rievaulx, Henry of Ghent, Robert Grosseteste, etc.). However, this focus, while a value in itself, also serves to connect philosophical perspectives on friendship from before and after the middle ages. It connects to the time before inasmuch as much of the work done on friendship in the Middle Ages is anchored in interpretations of Aristotle and Plato, and it connects to the time after by providing a counterpoint to the modern paradigm of what constitutes the philosophical life. The collection combines historical with thematic approaches to scholarship on this issue and is one of the only books of its kind to do so. It is, perhaps, unique in its historical sweep and will prove to be a canonical source for further research on this topic.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright
  2. pp. i-iv
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. vii-x
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  1. Abbreviations
  2. pp. xi-xii
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  1. Introduction
  2. James McGuirk
  3. pp. xiii-xxxiv
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  1. Part 1. Love and Friendship in the Context of the Tradition
  1. 1. The Theory of Friendship: Hermeneutics, Contextualisation, and the Transmission and Reception of Ancient Texts and Ideas, from ca. AD 350 to ca. 1500 (1999)
  2. pp. 3-64
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  1. Part 2. On the Philosophical Genesis of the Notion of Friendship: From the Greeks to the Medievals
  1. 2. Philia and Amicitia: The Philosophy of Friendship from Plato to Aquinas (1985)
  2. pp. 67-89
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  1. 3. Aristotelian Friendship in the Light of Greek Proverbial Wisdom (1996)
  2. pp. 90-106
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  1. Part 3. Friendship in the Philosophy of Augustine of Hippo
  1. 4. Anima una et cor unum: Friendship and Spiritual Unity in Augustine (1986)
  2. pp. 109-158
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  1. 5. Friendship and Mutual Deception in Book 4 of the Confessions of Augustine (2001)
  2. pp. 159-174
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  1. Part 4. The Cultivation of Friendship in the Monastic and Scholastic Traditions
  1. 6. Notes on the Prologue of Aelred of Rievaulx's De Spirituali Amicitia, with a Translation (1981)
  2. pp. 177-197
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  1. 7. Grosseteste's Reflections on Aristotelian Friendship: A ‘New' Commentary on Nichomachean Ethics 8.8-14 (1995)
  2. pp. 198-216
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  1. 8. The Sources and the Significance of Henry of Ghent's Disputed Question, ‘Is Friendship a Virtue?' (1996)
  2. pp. 217-235
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  1. 9. The Other as Oneself: Friendship and Love in the Thought of Thomas Aquinas (2002)
  2. pp. 236-262
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  1. Part 5. Friendship in Modernity and Postmodernity
  1. 10. Friendship and the Transcendental Ego: Kantian Freundschaft and Medieval Amicitia (1998)
  2. pp. 265-293
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  1. 11. ‘Too Many Friends or None at All?' A ‘Difference' Between Aristotle and Postmodernity (2003)
  2. pp. 294-313
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  1. 12. The Theory of Friendship in Erasmus and Thomas More (2006)
  2. pp. 314-340
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  1. Appendix
  2. pp. 341-344
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  1. Bibliography
  2. pp. 345-364
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 365-373
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  1. Series Information Page
  2. p. 374
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