Reading Anselm: Context and Criticism

A conference to be held at Boston College, 27-30 July 2015.

For more details go to conference website.
This Blogsite is dedicated to the work and legacy of Anselm of Aosta, Bec and Canterbury, who died in Canterbury on 21 April 1109.

© 2008-2015 Ian Logan. All rights reserved.
To notify me of recent publications, forthcoming events or anything of interest to Anselm scholars, please contact me using the form provided:


Sunday, 18 January 2015

Eileen Sweeney podcast

Eileen Sweeney, author of Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word speaks on Anselm in a History of Philosophy without any gaps podcast.

You can find my review of Professor Sweeney's book here.

Sunday, 21 December 2014

Reading Anselm: Context and Criticism, Boston College, July 2015

In July 2015 the first major international Anselm conference since the Canterbury conference of 2009 will take place in Boston. Keynote speakers are William Aird, Marcia Colish, Burcht Pranger, Denys Turner and Nicholas Watson.

You can find details of the conference and the call for papers at http://www.anselm2015.blogspot.co.uk/

Friday, 12 September 2014

Oxford day conference - Southern and Anselm

I have organised a day conference in Oxford with the support of Blackfriars (where I am a fellow) and St John's College. This is one of the first events to take place under the aegis of the nascent International Association for Anselm Studies (IAAS). Details of an international conference in Boston in July 2015 will follow shortly.

R.W. SOUTHERN: ANSELM'S BIOGRAPHER
A day conference on the impact of Sir Richard Southern's St Anselm and His Biographer more than 50 years after its publication

At Blackfriars Hall, St Giles, Oxford OX1 3LY
Saturday, 25 October 2014, 10.00 to 17.00

Speakers: Gillian Evans, Giles Gasper, David Luscombe, Alexander Murray, Samu Niskanen

Cost - £10; Students - free
Lunch and refreshments provided

A limited number of travel bursaries available for postgraduate students travelling within the UK

To book a place or for further information, you can contact me by clicking on this button:



You can also download a poster for the event HERE

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Recent Publications - July 2014

Articles

K. Burgess-Jackson, 'Does Anselm beg the question?' in International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 76 (2014) 5-18.

A. Rosato, 'The Interpretation of Anselm's Teaching on Christ's Satisfaction for Sin from Alexander of Hales to Duns Scotus' in Franciscan Studies, 71 (2013) 411-444.

Reviews
B. Gowers, 'Review of S. Niskanen, The Letter Collections of Anselm of Canterbury' in English Historical Review, 129 (2014) 417-419.

J.D. Wood, 'Review of M.Corbin, SJ, La grace de la liberté: Augustin et Anselme' in Reviews in Religion and Theology, 21 (2014) 330-333.

Sunday, 27 April 2014

Recent Publications - April 2014

Books
A.D. Smith, Anselm's Other Argument, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2014.
IL comment: I will be reviewing this book for a philosophy journal and will post a link when it appears. 

Articles
T.A. Heslop, 'St Anselm and the Visual Arts at Canterbury Cathedral, 1093-1109' in A. Bovey (ed.), Medieval Art, Architecture and Archaeology at Canterbury, British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions, Vol 35, Leeds: Maney Publishing, 2013, pp. 204-216.



Saturday, 8 March 2014

Recent Publications - March 2014 - Updated

Reviews
T. Clemmons, 'Review of E. Sweeney, Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word, Catholic University of America Press 2012' in Religious Studies Review, 40 (2014) 49.

 S. Marritt, 'Review of J. Truax, Archbishops Ralph d'Escures, William of Corbeil and Theobald of Bec. Heirs of Anselm and Ancestors of Becket, (The Archbishops of Canterbury Series), Ashgate 2012' in Catholic Historical Review, 100 (2014) 122-123.

Sunday, 22 December 2013

Recent Publications - December 2013

Books
F.B.A. Asiedu, From Augustine to Anselm: the influence of De trinitate on the Monologion, Brepols, Turnhout 2012.

Reviews
N. Reibe, 'Review of G.E.M. Gasper & I. Logan (Edd.), Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy, (Durham Medieval and Renaissance Monographs and Essays, vol. 2), Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Durham, and Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto, 2012' in Religious Studies Review, 39 (2013) 277-277.

Monday, 7 October 2013

Recent Publications - October 2013

Books
D. Robidoux, OSB (ed), A Man Born Out of Due Time: New Perspectives on St. Anselm of Canterbury, Lantern Books, New York 2013:
  • S. McGurk, OSB, 'Introduction'
  • S. McGurk, OSB, 'Anselm through the Eyes of Eadmer'
  • J.-C. Nault, OSB, 'The First Chapter of St Anselm's Proslogion'
  • M. Gorman, 'St. Anselm, Teacher and Model'
  • A. Inman, 'Anselm, Richard Dawkins and the Ontological Argument'
  • M. Hall, OSB, 'A Homily on Saint Anselm'
  • A. Bellenger, OSB, 'Anselm, the Monk-Archbishop'
  • H. Feiss, OSB, 'Saint Anselm: The Need to be Free'
  • D. Robidoux, OSB, 'Necessity in St Anselm's Notion of Method in Theology'
  • J. Wiseman, OSB, 'Anselm of Canterbury and Meister Eckhart'
  • R. Kennedy, 'The Scope and Purpose of St. Anselm's 'Two-Wills Doctrine' in His Dialogue on the Fall of the Devil'
  • P. Madigan, SJ, 'Review of B. Ward, Anselm of Canterbury: His Life and Legacy'
Articles
M. Elam, 'The Value of Imperfection in Anselm of Canterbury's Marian Prayers' in American Benedictine Review, 64 (2013) 252-266.

Reviews
R. Gameson, 'Review of Samu Niskanen, The letter collections of Anselm of Canterbury, Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia, 61, Brepols, Turnhout 2011' in Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64 (2013) 843-844.

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Recent Publications - September 2013

Articles
 G.E.M. Gasper & S.H. Gullbekk, 'Money and its use in the thought and experience of Anselm, archbishop of Canterbury (1093-1109)' in Journal of Medieval History, 38 (2012) 155-182.

Reviews
I. Logan, 'Review of E. Sweeney, Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word, Catholic University of America Press 2012' in New Blackfriars, 94 (2013) 622-623.

Saturday, 17 August 2013

Recent Publications - August 2013

Reviews
T.J. Holopainen, 'Review of G.E.M. Gasper & I. Logan (Edd.), Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy, (Durham Medieval and Renaissance Monographs and Essays, vol. 2), Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Durham, and Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto, 2012' in Heythrop Journal, 54 (2013) 460-461.

P. Madigan, 'Review of J. Truax, Archbishops Ralph D'Escures, William of Corbeil and Theobald of Bec: Heirs of Anselm and Ancestors of Becket, Ashgate, Farnham 2012' in Heythrop Journal, 54 (2013) 469.

Links to further reviews of Eileen Sweeney's excellent book, Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word:

 E. de Gaal Gyulai in Speculum

 A.J. Novikoff in The Medieval Review


My review of her book will be appearing in New Blackfriars at some point in the (near?) future.

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Recent Publications - July 2013

Articles
Y. Nagasawa, 'Models of Anselmian theism' in Faith and Philosophy, 30 (2013) 3-25.  

Reviews
I. Logan, 'Review of L. Schumacher, Divine Illumination: The history and future of Augustine's theory of knowledge, Wiley-Blackwell 2011' in New Blackfriars, 94 (2013) 476-478.

Saturday, 22 June 2013

Recent Publications - June 2013

Reviews
T.J. Holopainen, 'Review of Eileen C. Sweeney, Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word, Catholic University of America Press 2012' in Journal of the History of Philosophy, 51 (2013) 314.

N.J. Ristuccia, 'Review of Sally N. Vaughn, Archbishop Anselm 1093-1109 : Bec Missionary, Canterbury Primate, Patriarch of Another World, Ashgate 2012' in Reviews in Religion and Theology, 20 (2013)  338-34.

Sunday, 21 April 2013

Recent Publications - April 2013

Articles

Geo Siegwart, 'Gaunilo referiert Anselm. Aus dem Tagesgeschäft des Rekonstrukteurs' in Kriterion - Journal of Philosophy, 27 (2013) 1-29.
Abstract: The monk Gaunilo opens the vigorous disputation with Anselm by describing the infamous proof in the second chapter of the Proslogion. The following paper offers a detailed logical reconstruction of Gaunilo's account of Anselm's argument, thus making explicit the reasoning of Anselm in the view of Gaunilo. It will serve two purposes. Firstly it provides an easily understood example for the use of logic to interpret a nontrivial philosophical text. Secondly it reveals the reasons and the concepts involved in the argument, thereby indicating further argumentative and semantic tasks.

Thursday, 28 February 2013

Recent Publications - February 2013

Articles

G. Sumner, 'Why Anselm Still Matters' in Anglican Theological Review, 95 (2013) 25-36.

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Recent Publications - January 2013

Articles

S. Nash-Marshall, 'Saint Anselm and the Problem of Evil, or On Freeing Evil from the Problem of Evil' in International Philosophical Quarterly, 52 (2012) 455-470.

Monday, 19 November 2012

Recent Publications - November 2012

Books

S. Niskanen, The Letter Collections of Anselm of Canterbury. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia, 61, Brepols, Turnhout 2011.

Articles

D. Whidden, 'The Alleged Feudalism of Anselm’s Cur Deus Homo and the Benedictine Concepts of Obedience, Honor, and Order' in Nova et Vetera, English Edition, 9 (2011) 1055–87.

Reviews

R. Koopmans, 'Review of S. Niskanen, The Letter Collections of Anselm of Canterbury. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia, 61, Brepols, Turnhout 2011' in The Medieval Review 12.09.21.

Saturday, 17 November 2012

Report on 'St Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy' at Blackfriars, Oxford, 15 November 2012

Report by Ian Logan

An audience from across the UK attended the launch of the new book on Anselm, St Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy, a collection of essays by an international group of Anselm scholars.

The host was Fr Simon Gaine OP, the Regent of Blackfriars. The speakers were the editors of the volume, Dr Giles Gasper, Durham University, author of St Anselm of Canterbury and his Theological Inheritance, and Dr Ian Logan, Blackfriars Hall, Oxford University, author of Reading Anselm’s Proslogion: the history of Anselm’s argument and its significance today.

Fr Simon Gaine OP - Welcome address
Fr Simon spoke of the origins of the volume in the international conference held at Canterbury in 2009 to commemorate the 900th anniversary of Anselm's death. He went on to ask: ‘Who was St Anselm of Canterbury?’ An Italian who became a monk and abbot in Normandy then an archbishop in England. A respected teacher, a defender of church rights, but also a church reformer, a powerful spiritual writer of an influential collection prayers and meditations, a theologian and philosopher of brilliant originality. He left no lasting school of thought in the way that Augustine and Thomas did, but nevertheless his influence has been and continues to be great as the wide-ranging set of essays in this volume indicates. It is this influence, this legacy, that the volume captures.

Anselm has an important place in Christian thought, summed up in the phrase 'Faith seeking understanding' - a phrase he invented and which is always used whenever there is discussion of the relationship of faith and reason. Anselm is one the greatest exponents of the application of reason to faith.

 In this set of essays the editors first set out a picture of Anselm, who is 'refracted', as they put, it in the various essays presented in this volume. One of the intentional merits of the volume is that it contains much fresh scholarship from both established and young, up and coming scholars. From this volume, it is clear that Anselm studies are in a vibrant state. Interest in Anselm continues to grow apace. This volume will only serve to facilitate that growth.

Dr Giles Gasper - Anselm and the Bible: Narratives of Exile 
Anselm of Canterbury is famous for his insistence that he would establish positions of argument without reference to authorities and to the Bible as seen in the Monologion, Proslogion and Cur Deus Homo. What place then does Anselm give to biblical quotation within his theological scheme?

In his third Prayer to the Virgin Mary Anselm focuses on the role of the Virgin in carrying and bearing the creator of the world. Anselm alludes to the creation of light and the darkness that precedes it in the book of Genesis. To darkness, demons and sin, Mary’s child is the solution and salvation.

The opening chapter of the Proslogion is based around a compelling biblical narrative of exile. The chapter moves through a sequence of quotations from Matthew, Exodus, and Psalms, in which the consequences of the sin of Adam are explored. The desperate state of mankind and the need for grace is evoked. Anselm ends his opening with Genesis 1.27 ‘And God created man to his own image’, to reinforce the point that the image remains, but with a need for God to renew and redeem it. He then invokes Isaiah 7.9 on faith and understanding.

This ‘lyrical’ introduction, to use von Balthasar’s terminology, is important in setting up Anselm’s dialectical argument. Anselm provides biblical support for his statements, occasionally counter-posing the dialectical and the lyrical or biblical. Dialectic identifies what the argument is and how best to address it. The lyrical and biblical provide a reminder of both the reasons why this is beneficial, and of the limitations of human reason.

Dr Ian Logan - Some suggestions concerning the origin of the phrase, ‘than which nothing greater can be thought’ 
The phrase ‘than which nothing greater can be thought’ is central to Anselm’s argument for God in the Proslogion. Ian suggested that it is possible, even likely, that this phrase was derived by Anselm from the Roman Stoic philosopher, Seneca, who uses the identical phrase in his Natural Questions to describe the magnitude of the world. The fact that the phrase is used by Anselm as he addresses the unbeliever (the ‘fool’ of the Psalms, ‘who says in his heart, There is no God’) supports this view. Anselm was a dialectician, and in dialectical argumentation one of your first tasks is to get your opponent to agree to the terms you are using. In using this term, Anselm is inviting the unbeliever to accept a term an unbeliever uses, which he is therefore unlikely to identify with God as understood in Catholic thought, whose existence Anselm is seeking to prove.

The difficulty with this line of thought is that there are no known extant manuscripts of Seneca’s Natural Questions predating the early 12th century and Anselm wrote the Proslogion in the last quarter of the 11th century. Similar phrases can also be found in Cicero, Augustine and Boethius. However, the fact that Anselm uses exactly the same words as Seneca and that Anselm rarely uses quotations, suggests that this is an explicit quotation from Seneca and is supposed to be recognised as one. As such it throws light on Anselm’s intentions in his little book, the Proslogion, and indicates that Seneca’s work was known prior to the early 12th century.

Announcement 
After a stimulating question and answer session, the editors of the volume announced their intention to facilitate the establishing of a society or association for Anselm scholarship and that they are inviting expressions of interest from potential supporters and members. With this in mind, a one day conference at Blackfriars, Oxford, in 2013 is being planned, followed in 2014 by a full conference.

Saturday, 27 October 2012

Anselm Event - Update

'Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy'
The Aula, Blackfriars Hall, St Giles, Oxford
Thursday, 15 November, 2012 at 5 p.m.

Blackfriars Hall, Oxford, is holding a special event to launch the book, Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy, edited by Giles E. M. Gasper and Ian Logan, and published by the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Toronto, and the Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Durham University.

The editors will give two short papers -
Dr Giles Gasper, Durham: Anselm and the Bible: Narratives of Exile
Dr Ian Logan, Blackfriars: Some suggestions concerning the origin of the phrase, 'that than which nothing greater can be thought'

Followed by a wine/soft drinks reception.
Copies of the book will be available at discounted prices.
If you would like to attend the event, please let me know by clicking on the 'contact me' button above and completing the form.


Follow this event on twitter #AnselmEvents

Friday, 19 October 2012

Advance notice


‘Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy’
The Aula, Blackfriars Hall, St Giles, Oxford
Thursday, 15 November 2012, 5.00 p.m. 

To launch the book of the same title, commemorating the 900th anniversary of Anselm’s death, with an update on some of the current developments in Anselm studies.
Followed by a wine/soft drinks reception.

Speakers will be the editors of the volume:
Giles Gasper - Durham University
Ian Logan - Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford

All the welcome. 

Recent Publications - October 2012

Books

R. Hofmeister Pich, Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109): Philosophical Theology and Ethics, Brepols, Turnhout 2012.
Papers from the Third International Conference of Medieval Philosophy in Port Alegre, Brazil, 02-04 September 2009.