Peter Abelard
Noun | 1. | Peter Abelard - French philosopher and theologian; lover of Heloise (1079-1142) |
单词 | peter abelard | |||||||||
释义 | Peter Abelard
Peter Abelard
Abelard, Peter(ăb`əlärd), Fr. Pierre Abélard (pyĕr äbālär`), 1079–1142, French philosopher and teacher, b. Le Pallet, near Nantes.LifeAbelard went (c.1100) to Paris to study under William of ChampeauxWilliam of Champeaux After Heloise bore a son, a secret marriage was held to appease her uncle. Fulbert's ill-treatment of Heloise led Abelard to remove her secretly to the convent at Argenteuil. Fulbert, who thought that Abelard planned to abandon her, had ruffians attack and emasculate him. Abelard sought refuge at Saint-Denis where he became a monk. In 1120 he left Saint-Denis to teach. At the instigation of his rivals, the Council of Soissons had his first theological work burned as heretical (1121). After a short imprisonment, he returned to Saint-Denis but fell out with the monks and built a hermitage near Troyes. To house the students who sought him out, he established a monastery, the Paraclete. When Abelard became abbot at Saint-Gildas-en-Rhuys, Brittany, he gave the Paraclete to Heloise, who became an abbess of a convent there. St. Bernard of ClairvauxBernard of Clairvaux, Saint In 1980 a scholar examining a 15th-century letter-writing manual discovered that 113 unattributed fragments of love letters contained in a section of the book had actually been written by Abelard and Heloise during their affair. These letters have added to, but not changed, the understanding of the characters of each of the lovers and of their romance's rare and intense blend of the intellectual and the erotic. PhilosophyA theological Platonist, Abelard emphasized Aristotle's dialectic method. His belief that the methods of logic could be applied to the truths of faith was in opposition to the mysticism of St. Bernard. He also opposed the extreme views of William of Champeaux and RoscelinRoscelin His most influential work was Sic et non, a collection of contradictory selections from Scripture and the Fathers of the Church. In his introduction to Sic et non, Abelard set a method of resolving these apparent contradictions, thereby making the work significant for the development of the scholastic method. This work formed the basis for the widely read Sentences of Peter LombardPeter Lombard, BibliographySee D. E. Luscombe, The School of Peter Abelard (1969); D. W. Robertson, Jr., Abelard and Heloise (1972); R. Pernoud, Heloise and Abelard (tr. 1973); C. J. Mews, The Lost Love Letters of Heloise and Abelard (2001); J. Burge, Heloise & Abelard (2004). Abélard, PeterBorn 1079 in Palais; died Apr. 21, 1142, in the abbey of Saint Marcel near Châlons-sur-Saône. French philosopher, theologian, and poet. Abélard studied in Paris with Roscelin and William of Champeaux. In 1113 he opened his own school, which attracted many students. The tragic story of Abélard’s love for Héloïse ended with their withdrawal to a monastery (1119). In the argument about the nature of universals, Abélard developed a doctrine which was later called conceptualism, according to which general concepts are neither realities nor simple verbal designations but are contained in the meaning of words and represent an idea content applicable to a great many separate objects when there are similarities or concurrences among them. In ethics Abélard transferred emphasis from the act to the intent and considered acting according to one’s conscience to be the criterion of morality. Abélard’s development of Scholastic “dialectics,” consisting of the presentation of opposite arguments (the work Sic et non), made him one of the most prominent representatives of the Scholastic method. The rational tendency in Abélard’s theology (“I must understand in order to believe”) provoked the protest of the representatives of orthodox mysticism (Bernard of Clairvaux); Abélard’s doctrines were condemned by the Soissons (1121) and the Sens (1140) councils and also by Pope Innocent II. Abélard’s Latin love poetry, autobiography, Historia calamitatum (1132–36, published in 1616; Russian translation in 1902 and 1959), and correspondence with Héloi’se (1132–35), which was already translated into French during the 12th century and inspired many writers, are notable for their psychological depth. WORKSOpera omnia. Paris, 1855.Philosophische Schriften, vol. 31, nos. 1–4. Münster, 1919–33. REFERENCESFedotov, G. P. Abeliar, P. Petrograd, 1924.Sidorova, N. A. Ocherki po istorii rannei gorodskoi kul’tury vo Frantsii. Moscow, 1953. Rémusat, C. Abélard, vols. 1–2. Paris, 1845. Ottaviano, C. Pietro Abelardo. [Rome, 1930.] A. I. RUBIN and A. D. MIKHAILOV Abélard, PeterAbélard, PeterPeter Abelard
Synonyms for Peter Abelard
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