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Modes of Knowing and Ordering Knowledge in Early Christianity

Crawford, Matthew Roy
Champion, Michael Wesley
Ayres, Lewis Odell
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Abstract
This introductory chapter provides an overview to the volume, arguing that early Christian modes of knowing and ordering knowledge involved complex processes of appropriation, adaptation, reproduction, and reconfiguration of Jewish and classical epistemologies. This resulted in practices of knowing that established powerful ways of acting in the world and negotiating late-antique social structures. It shaped the behaviour of individuals and established norms for communal life. We argue that studying these phenomena requires consideration of intersections between a range of elite discourses, institutional forms, and the material world of the period. Foregrounding the myriad ways in which early Christian epistemology was embedded in earlier intellectual traditions and forms of life, we make a case that Christian theological commitments, in all their diversity, were an essential component in the development of distinctively Christian ways of knowing and ordering knowledge. Attention to theological assumptions and arguments is one essential element in understanding significant contours of late-antique life and society.
Keywords
epistemology, modes of knowing, ordering knowledge, epistemic structures, discourses, institutions, materiality
Date
2023
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
The Intellectual World of Late Antique Christianity: Reshaping Classical Traditions
Volume
Issue
Page Range
1-20
Article Number
ACU Department
Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry
Faculty of Theology and Philosophy