Conversion Debates in Hellenistic Philosophy and Early Christianity
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444). This special issue belongs to the section "Religions and Theologies".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 August 2022) | Viewed by 24913
Special Issue Editors
Interests: reception of pagan philosophical ideas into Christianity; Hellenistic and Augustan literature
Interests: medieval and renaissance philosophy
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We hereby propose a volume on the topic of conversion in Hellenistic Philosophy and Early Christianity. To date, the experience of conversion has been studied in fragmented ways, mainly through the perspectives of cognitive psychology, anthropology (especially vis-a-vis studies on ecstasy) and philosophy. The historical dimensions of the phenomenon as examined, for example, in Ustinova 2017 (Divine Mania, Routledge) and Stump 2020 (in Philosopher’s Imprint 20.32) tend to focus on Socrates and clearly point to a rich but currently overlooked area of research. At the same time, although the influence of Greco-Roman philosophy and rhetoric on early Christian thinkers is increasingly established in the bibliography, we tend to deal with Christian conversion as a separate phenomenon; Christian conversion stories are often categorised as miracles, prophecies or dreams and accordingly studied in isolation, grouped in terms of genre rather than thematically. However, a mere skim through the anonymous story of Thekla, who becomes bewitched and enamoured with Paul’s words by eavesdropping on his preaching presents us with a strikingly Platonising example of conversion that can speak both to a pagan and Christian audience. Our contributors—some of whom we specify in the list below—examine intellectual and religious conversion in the time frame specified above by addressing primarily but not exclusively the following issues:
- The nature and symptoms of conversion;
- The debate on authentic conversion;
- Articulating conversion (including apophatic traditions);
- The motifs that indicate conversion and how they play with audience expectations (light, fire, etc.);
- Unity with God in Neoplatonic and early Christian traditions;
- Approaching truth in Stoic and Epicurean traditions;
- The status and prescribed behaviour of the converted;
- The antagonistic relationship of philosophy and theology regarding conversion;
- Synthesising traditions (Jewish–Christian–pagan) to express conversion;
- Theoretical approaches to untangling the historical perspectives of conversion.
Dr. Eva Anagnostou
Dr. Georgios Steiris
Dr. Georgios Arabatzis
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- intellectual conversion in the Hellenistic period
- religious conversion in the Early Christian Period
- symptoms of conversion
- articulation of conversion
- rhetorical motifs/imagery associated with conversion
- theories of conversion
- embodying/projecting the converted
- debating true experience in Hellenistic and Christian intellectual traditions
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