Christianity and Classical Culture
How the Early Church Transformed the Ancient World
-
-
5.0 • 1 Rating
-
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
In this seminal work, Charles Norris Cochrane examines the profound impact of early Christianity on the intellectual and cultural landscape of the late Roman Empire. Through a meticulous analysis of key figures and texts, Cochrane reveals how the emerging Christian faith challenged and ultimately reshaped the classical worldview that had dominated the Mediterranean world for centuries. He argues that the Church Fathers, in their efforts to articulate a coherent Christian theology and philosophy, engaged in a creative synthesis of biblical revelation and classical learning that laid the foundations for a distinctively Christian culture. Cochrane's erudite and engaging study offers a fascinating glimpse into a pivotal moment in Western history, when the old order was giving way to the new, and the seeds of medieval Christendom were being sown.
—
Charles Norris Cochrane (1889-1945) was a distinguished Canadian historian and political philosopher. He taught at the University of Toronto for over two decades, where he specialized in the history of ancient and medieval political thought. Cochrane's other major works include Thucydides and the Science of History and David Hume and the Eighteenth Century.