1st Edition
Augustine’s Philosophy Classic and Contemporary Themes
List of Abbreviations
Introduction Anna Marmodoro and Rodrigo Ballon-Villanueva
1. Augustine on the Categories: Aristotelian Strategies Against Arianism and Pelagianism, Richard Cross
2. Augustine, McTaggart and the Reality of Time, Mark Edwards
3. Augustine on Eternal and Necessary Creation, Rodrigo Ballon-Villanueva
4. Augustine and the Doctrine of Double Creation, Marilù Papandreou & Simon J. Evnine
5. Augustine on Privation, Giovanni Catapano
6. Augustine on the Primacy of Acquaintance, Blake D. Dutton
7. Augustine on Mirror Image and Self-Knowledge, Tianyue Wu
8. Augustine’s Philosophical Spiritualism, Victoria Trumbull
9. Consent and Approval: Augustine on the Unity of the Will, Terence Irwin
10. Why Loving God Makes You Happier than Loving Yourself: Augustine on the Goal of Human Life, Caleb Cohoe
11. The Politics of Perfection: Augustine on the Mixing of the Two Cities, James Wetzel
12. The Fallen Rome and the Unshakeable City: On Augustine’s Philosophy of History, Sophie-Grace Chappell
Biography
Anna Marmodoro is the Leonard and Elizabeth Eslick Professor of Philosophy at Saint Louis University (US) and Honorary Professor of Philosophy at Durham University (UK), where she previously held the Chair of Metaphysics (2016-2024). Prior to this, she was successively a Junior and a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Oxford, affiliated with Corpus Christi College (2007-2016). Her monographs include Aristotle on Perceiving Objects (2014), Everything in Everything. Anaxagoras’s Metaphysics (2017), Forms and Structure in Plato’s Metaphysics, Properties in Ancient Metaphysics (2023), and Metaphysics. An Introduction to Contemporary Debates and Their History, co-authored with Erasmus Mayr (2019).
Rodrigo Ballon-Villanueva is a PhD Candidate in Philosophy at Durham University (UK). Since 2015, he has also been a member of the Institute of Medieval Studies at the University of Navarra (Spain), doing research on the Neoplatonic tradition from Augustine to Eriugena. His work lies at the intersection of ancient/medieval philosophy and contemporary metaphysics.






