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Philipp W. Rosemann

University of Kentucky
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    94
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    3

 More details
  • University of Kentucky
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Specific Religions
Religious Topics
Michel Foucault
Martin Heidegger
Philosophy of History
Areas of Interest
Edmund Husserl
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
Martin Heidegger
Specific Religions
Religious Topics
Michel Foucault
Philosophy of History
3 more
  • All publications (94)
  •  80
    Wandering in the Path of the Averroean System
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 73 (1): 185-230. 1999.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  46
    Νόησιϛ νοήσεωϛ und taʿaqqul at-taʿaqqul. Das Aristotelische Problem der Selbstbezüglichkeit des Unbewegten Bewegers in der Kommentierung Ibn Rušds
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 40 (4). 1986.
  •  59
    William of Auvergne, The Trinity, or The First Principle [De trinitate, seu de primo principio]. Translated from the Latin by Roland J. Teske and Francis C. Wade. Introduction by Roland J. Teske (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (82): 362-363. 1991.
  •  62
    What is Philosophy?
    Philotheos 17 5-17. 2017.
  •  57
    The Sentences, Book 1 (review)
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 82 (3): 546-549. 2008.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  116
    Tradition and Deconstruction
    Philosophy and Theology 25 (1): 79-107. 2013.
    It is easy to view tradition and deconstruction as irreconcilably opposed approaches to the history of ideas: tradition aims at the preservation, transmission, and deepening of highly valued insights, whereas deconstruction exposes inconsistencies in these insights and distortions in their transmission. This article argues that this opposition is more superficial than real. Closer analysis of the workings of tradition shows authentic tradition to require an inherent critical element, a deconstru…Read more
    It is easy to view tradition and deconstruction as irreconcilably opposed approaches to the history of ideas: tradition aims at the preservation, transmission, and deepening of highly valued insights, whereas deconstruction exposes inconsistencies in these insights and distortions in their transmission. This article argues that this opposition is more superficial than real. Closer analysis of the workings of tradition shows authentic tradition to require an inherent critical element, a deconstructive impulse. Deconstruction, on the other hand, makes sense only as part of a project of tradition-building. The article advances this thesis in dialogue with Denys the Carthusian, a late medieval theologian who developed a significant theory of the Christian tradition, and Martin Heidegger, who in Being and Time carefully articulated the foundations of the deconstructive method.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  59
    Rudi te Velde, Aquinas on God: The “Divine Science” of the “Summa theologiae.” (Ashgate Studies in the History of Philosophical Theology.) Aldershot, Eng., and Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2006. Pp. viii, 192; black-and-white figures (review)
    Speculum 82 (3): 773-775. 2007.
  •  38
    The Creative Word
    Maynooth Philosophical Papers 10 97-115. 2020.
    Book XI of his Confessions contains Augustine’s celebrated ‘treatise’ on time. In reality, however, the ‘treatise’ is no such thing, but rather an integral part of a discussion of God’s creation through the Word: if God creates by speaking, as Scripture affirms, then how can God speak, given the fact that he must be thought not to be subject to time? What is a timeless word? While these are the questions that Augustine explicitly addresses in Book XI, there is something very important that he do…Read more
    Book XI of his Confessions contains Augustine’s celebrated ‘treatise’ on time. In reality, however, the ‘treatise’ is no such thing, but rather an integral part of a discussion of God’s creation through the Word: if God creates by speaking, as Scripture affirms, then how can God speak, given the fact that he must be thought not to be subject to time? What is a timeless word? While these are the questions that Augustine explicitly addresses in Book XI, there is something very important that he does not justify at all: namely, the possibility of speaking the world into existence. My paper investigates the episteme within which such a claim can make sense. How must one conceive of the relationship between the world and words to be able to assume that the latter can ‘make’ the former?
  •  30
    Sinngestalten. Metaphysik in der Vielfalt menschlichen Fragens. Festschrift fur Emerich Coreth, herausgegeben von Otto Muck (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 91 (90): 326-330. 1993.
  •  31
    The Lutheran Heidegger
    Philotheos 7 327-332. 2007.
  •  40
    Sacra pagina or scientia divina?
    Philotheos 4 284-300. 2004.
  •  28
    Robert Kildwardby, On Time and Imagination.«De tempore».«De spiritu fantastico». Edited by P. Osmund Lewry (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (82): 366-368. 1991.
  •  32
    Penser l'Autre: un nouvel essai de typologie
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 94 (1): 164-169. 1996.
  •  46
    Penser l'Autre: De l'architectonique d'un système qui ne serait pas homogénéisant
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 94 (2): 311-329. 1996.
  •  37
    Repertorium edierter Texte des Mittelalters aus dem Bereich der Philosophie und angrenzender Gebiete. Rolf Schönberger et Brigitte Kible (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 93 (3): 430-433. 1995.
  •  41
    Penser l'Autre: la philosophie africaine en quête d'identité
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 96 (2): 285-303. 1998.
  •  56
    Robert Grosseteste and His Intellectual Milieu: New Editions and Studies ed. by John Flood, James R. Ginther, and Joseph W. Goering (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 52 (3): 606-607. 2014.
  •  42
    Penser l'Autre: les dimensions de l'altérité selon le P. Joseph de Finance
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 92 (2-3): 335-347. 1994.
  •  35
    Nova et vetera
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 91 (1): 126-136. 1993.
  •  80
    Peter Lombard
    OUP Usa. 2004.
    Peter Lombard is best known as the author of a celebrated work entitled Book of Sentences, which for several centuries served as the standard theological textbook in the Christian West. It was the subject of more commentaries than any other work of Christian literature besides the Bible itself. The Book of Sentences is essentially a compilation of older sources, from the Scriptures and Augustine down to several of the Lombard's contemporaries, such as Hugh of Saint Victor and Peter Abelard. Its …Read more
    Peter Lombard is best known as the author of a celebrated work entitled Book of Sentences, which for several centuries served as the standard theological textbook in the Christian West. It was the subject of more commentaries than any other work of Christian literature besides the Bible itself. The Book of Sentences is essentially a compilation of older sources, from the Scriptures and Augustine down to several of the Lombard's contemporaries, such as Hugh of Saint Victor and Peter Abelard. Its importance lies in the Lombard's organisation of the theological material, his method of presentation, and the way in which he shaped doctrine in several major areas. Despite his importance, however, there is no accessible introduction to Peter Lombard's life and thought available in any modern language. This volume fills this considerable gap. Philipp W. Rosemann begins by demonstrating how the Book of Sentences grew out of a long tradition of Christian reflection-a tradition, ultimately rooted in Scripture, which by the twelfth century had become ready to transform itself into a theological system. Turning to the Sentences, Rosemann then offers a brief exposition of the Lombard's life and work. He proceeds to a book-by-book examination and interpretation of its main topics, including the nature and attributes of God, the Trinity, creation, angelology, human nature and the Fall, original sin, Christology, ethics, and the sacraments. He concludes by exploring how the Sentences helped shape the further development of the Christian tradition, from the twelfth century through the time of Martin Luther.
    11/12th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  45
    New Interest in Peter Lombard - The Current State of Research and Some Desiderata for the Future
    Recherches de Theologie Et Philosophie Medievales 72 (1): 133-152. 2005.
    After the publication of Marcia Colish’s Peter Lombard in 1994, studies on the author of the Book of Sentences have entered a new phase. This article provides an assessment of the state of research in the field and makes suggestions for its further development. In an appreciation and critique of Marcia Colish’s contribution, it argues that Colish’s interpretation, for all its merit, errs on a number of points: the proofs of God’s existence, charity, and the structure of theological ethics are im…Read more
    After the publication of Marcia Colish’s Peter Lombard in 1994, studies on the author of the Book of Sentences have entered a new phase. This article provides an assessment of the state of research in the field and makes suggestions for its further development. In an appreciation and critique of Marcia Colish’s contribution, it argues that Colish’s interpretation, for all its merit, errs on a number of points: the proofs of God’s existence, charity, and the structure of theological ethics are important examples. The second part of the essay considers the potential of research on the tradition of commentaries upon the Sentences. Given the central place that this genre of theological writing occupied in Christian thought between the twelfth and the sixteenth centuries, the Sentences commentaries could serve as a window upon the tradition. It is suggested that study of the literary form of the commentaries will shed much light on changes in the conception of theology which occurred in the period under consideration.
  •  32
    Mary J. Carruthers, The Book of Memory: a Study of Memory in Medieval Culture
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 90 (86): 236-239. 1992.
  •  62
    Penser l'Autre: théologie négative et ‘postmodernité
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 91 (2): 296-310. 1993.
  •  27
    Michel Puech, Kant et la causalité. Étude sur la formation du système critique (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (84): 666-669. 1991.
  •  44
    On the ‘Christian Turn’ in Foucault’s Thought
    Maynooth Philosophical Papers 11 75-84. 2022.
    The recently published volume Foucault, les Pères, le sexe brings together sixteen papers delivered at a conference held in 2018 to mark the launch of Les aveux de la chair, the posthumous fourth volume of the History of Sexuality. This review essay focuses on the contribution of the Foucault Archives to research on the philosopher’s thought; on critical reactions by patrologists to Foucault’s venture into study of the Church Fathers; and, finally, on the significance of the ‘Christian turn’ in …Read more
    The recently published volume Foucault, les Pères, le sexe brings together sixteen papers delivered at a conference held in 2018 to mark the launch of Les aveux de la chair, the posthumous fourth volume of the History of Sexuality. This review essay focuses on the contribution of the Foucault Archives to research on the philosopher’s thought; on critical reactions by patrologists to Foucault’s venture into study of the Church Fathers; and, finally, on the significance of the ‘Christian turn’ in the late Foucault’s lectures and writings.
    Michel Foucault
  •  79
    Jean-Pierre Torrell O.P., Saint Thomas Aquinas, 2: Spiritual Master. Trans. Robert Royal. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2003. Pp. xiii, 422. $49.95 (cloth); $29.95 (paper). First published in 1996 under the title Saint Thomas d'Aquin, maître spirituel, by Éditions Universitaires, Fribourg, Switzerland, and Éditions du Cerf, Paris (review)
    Speculum 81 (2): 622-623. 2006.
  •  43
    L'être entre 'positivité pure' et 'milieu médiatisant'
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 95 (2): 225-239. 1997.
    Kant: Metaphysics and Epistemology
  •  42
    Leonard Cohen, Philosopher
    Maynooth Philosophical Papers 9 1-20. 2018.
    This paper, which the author delivered as his inaugural lecture as the Chair of Philosophy at Maynooth University, explores the relationship between philosophy, poetry, and religion. Through a line-by-line interpretation of Leonard Cohen’s song ‘Steer Your Way’, it discovers the poet in a space between postmodern disillusionment and a desire for faith. What opens Cohen to the latter is specifically the experience of pain and brokenness, which lead him to the figure of Jesus. The paper concludes …Read more
    This paper, which the author delivered as his inaugural lecture as the Chair of Philosophy at Maynooth University, explores the relationship between philosophy, poetry, and religion. Through a line-by-line interpretation of Leonard Cohen’s song ‘Steer Your Way’, it discovers the poet in a space between postmodern disillusionment and a desire for faith. What opens Cohen to the latter is specifically the experience of pain and brokenness, which lead him to the figure of Jesus. The paper concludes with a reflection on Richard Kearney’s notion of ‘anatheism’, the return to a ‘God after God’.
  •  32
    Helmut Boese, Wilhelm von Moerbeke als Ûbersetzer der Stoicheiosis theologike des Proclus. Untersuchungen und Texte zur Überlieferung der Elementatio theologica (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 89 (82): 363-366. 1991.
  •  44
    Klaus Oehler, Charles Sanders Peirce (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 92 (2-3): 358-362. 1994.
    Charles Sanders Peirce
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