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基本説明
An edition, with introduction and comprehensive notes, of one of Newman' best-known works. The sermons, which explore the relation of faith and reason, are a key document of the Oxford Movement.
Full Description
Newman himself called the Oxford University Sermons, first published in 1843, `the best, not the most perfect, book I have done'. He added, `I mean there is more to develop in it'. Indeed, the book is a precursor of all his major later works, including especially the Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine and the Grammar of Assent. Dealing with the relationship of faith and reason, the fifteen sermons represent Newman's resolution of the conflict between heart and head that so troubled believers, non-believers, and agnostics of the nineteenth century, Their controversial nature also makes them one of the primary documents of the Oxford Movement. This new edition provides an introduction to the sermons, a definitive text with textual variants, extensive annotation, and appendices containing previously unpublished material.
Contents
Editors' Introduction ; Fifteen Sermons Preached Before the University of Oxford ; Appendix A. Newman's Memorandum in Diary Appendix, Planning the Preface to the Proposed Translation of the University Sermons ; Appendix B. Newman's 'Rough Draft of Matter for Preface to French Translation of Univ. Sermons, Afterwards Written for Dalgairns in Latin' (1847) ; Appendix C. Textual Appendix