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Dreams, Virtue and Divine Knowledge in Early Christian Egypt

Dreams, Virtue and Divine Knowledge in Early Christian Egypt

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Bronwen Neil, Doru Costache, Kevin Wagner
Cambridge University Press, 4/25/2019
EAN 9781108481182, ISBN10: 1108481183

Hardcover, 222 pages, 23.6 x 21.6 x 1.5 cm
Language: English

What did dreams mean to Egyptian Christians of the first to the sixth centuries? Alexandrian philosophers, starting with Philo, Clement and Origen, developed a new approach to dreams that was to have profound effects on the spirituality of the medieval West and Byzantium. Their approach, founded on the principles of Platonism, was based on the convictions that God could send prophetic dreams and that these could be interpreted by people of sufficient virtue. In the fourth century, the Alexandrian approach was expanded by Athanasius and Evagrius to include a more holistic psychological understanding of what dreams meant for spiritual progress. The ideas that God could be known in dreams and that dreams were linked to virtue flourished in the context of Egyptian desert monasticism. This volume traces that development and its influence on early Egyptian experiences of the divine in dreams.

1. An introduction to Greco-Roman traditions on dreams and virtue Bronwen Neil
2. The development of an Alexandrian tradition Bronwen Neil
3. Sleep, dreams and soul-travel
Athanasius within the tradition Doru Costache
4. Synesius of Cyrene and Neoplatonic dream theory Kevin Wagner
5. Expanding beyond the Egyptian ascetic tradition Bronwen Neil.