Image for Boethius : The Consolations of Music, Logic, Theology, and Philosophy

Boethius : The Consolations of Music, Logic, Theology, and Philosophy

Part of the Clarendon Paperbacks series
See all formats and editions

The Consolations of Philosophy by Boethius, whose English translators include King Alfred, Geoffrey Chaucer, and Queen Elizabeth I, ranks among the most remarkable books to be written by a prisoner awaiting the execution of a tyrannical death sentence.

Its interpretation is bound up with his other writings on mathematics and music, on Aristotelian and propositional logic, and on central themes of Christian dogma.

Chadwick begins by tracing the career of Boethius, a Roman rising to high office under the Gothic King Theoderic the Great, and suggests that his death may be seen as a cruel by-product of Byzantine ambitions to restore Roman imperial rule after its elimination in the West in AD 476.

Subsequent chapters examine in detail his educational programme in the liberal arts designed to avert a threatened collapse of culture and his ambition to translate into Latin everything he could find on Plato and Aristotle. Boethius has been called `last of the Romans, first of the scholastics'.

This book is the first major study in English of a writer who was of critical importance in the history of thought.

Read More
Available
£63.00 Save 10.00%
RRP £70.00
Add Line Customisation
3 in stock Need More ?
Add to List
Product Details
Clarendon Press
0198265492 / 9780198265498
Paperback / softback
180.937
04/10/1990
United Kingdom
328 pages
139 x 216 mm, 428 grams