Subject Area: Religious Philosophy
Koitzsch, Kerry2024 1-4955-1253-3 416 pages"Further investment in the study of Reuchlin's work will add the considerable value of a new and somewhat under-studied view of the formative years of European understanding of the Hebrew language, theosophy, and mysticism. The Christian mutation of Kabbalism as understood in the nineteenth century is a direct consequence of Reuchlin's thought and interpretive writings, and variants of Christianized Kabbalah have been promulgated into the twenty-first century." -Kerry Koitzsch ("Preface")
Berry, Paul2016 1-4955-0508-1 148 pagesThis monograph is the closing work in a series of ten titles by Dr. Paul Berry. The collection began with an initial study,
The Christian Inscription at Pompeii. This work traced the line of cultural, philosophical and theological inheritance that extends from the philosophy or Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) to the theology of Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274 A.D.)
Berry, Paul2009 0-7734-4899-3 92 pagesThis work argues for the restoration of Aristotelianism to the college curriculum to countervail the prevailing focus on modernism and to counteract the twenty-first century proliferation of atheist tracts.
Squires, William2022 1-4955-1042-5 116 pagesThis book offers a translation by Neil R. Parker of William Harder Squires' dissertation on Jonathan Edwards' Doctrine of the Will. It includes an introduction and notes by Richard A. S. Hall.
Gluck, Andrew L.2012 0-7734-3054-7 752 pagesThis book shows how Judah Abrabanel’s writings are philosophical, and not merely religious. It examines the Renaissance belief that Love should know more than Wisdom, which is something Abrabanel taught. The ultimate mystical union with God for Abrabanel is beneficence towards one’s fellow human beings. His view is that love is the affirmation of both God and human individual experience. Knowledge of man and God are both dependent upon the experience of love.
Koitzsch, Kerry2024 1-4955-1209-6 888 pages"Johann Reuchlin's De Verbo Mirifico remains a crucially significant document in the history of Western esotericism, religion, and philosophy. First published in 1494, De Verbo is a testament to the enduring fascination with the Kaballah and its traditions. Reuchlin's first Kaballistic works as a foundation to his later Kaballistic study, De Arte Cabalistica." -Kerry Koitzsch