Anselm
Saint Anselm of Canterbury (1033 or 1034 - April 21, 1109), a widely influential mediæval philosopher and theologian, held the office of Archbishop of Canterbury from 1093 to 1109.
Philosophers perhaps think of Anselm primarily as the author of the ontological argument for the existence of God. But he also authored a number of other arguments for the existence of God, based on cosmological and teleological grounds.
Western theologians however, regard Anselm is important because he interprets the death and resurrection of Christ as the self-satisfaction of God in order to allow for the salvation of sinful men and women whose salvation would otherwise offend God's inherent property of justice. In this way Anselm established one of the most prominent atonement theories in the history of western theology.
Major Works:
- Monologion
- Proslogon
Other Dialogs:
- De Veritate
- De Libertate
- De Grammatico
- Cur Deus Homo?
External Link
St. Anselm at the Christian Classics Ethereal Library: http://www.ccel.org/a/anselm/
Referenced By
Aquinas | Aristotelian view of God | Christian saint | Doctor ecclesiae | Doctor of the Church | Doctors of the Church | Goedel's ontological proof | Goedels ontological proof | Guibert de Nogent | Guibert of Nogent | Gödel's ontological proof | History of philosophy | Impassibility | King William II of England | Legalism (theology) | List of Saints | List of philosophical topics | List of philosophical topics (A-C) | Medieval literature | Mystic | Mystical | Mysticism | Mysticist | Mystics | Nature of God | Ontological argument | Patron saint | Philosopher | Philosophers | Pope Paschal II | Proslogium | Prosologium | Roger I of Sicily | Roger of Salisbury | Saint Thomas Aquinas, | Sinful | Sinner | Sins | St. Thomas Aquinas | St Thomas Aquinas | TheOntologicalArgument | The nature of God | The ontological argument | Thomas Aquinas | Universae ecclesiae doctor | WhatIsGod | What is God | William II | William II of England | William Rufus | William of St Carilef
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