
- 274 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
The book deals with martyrdom understood as a philosophical category. The main question pertains to the evidential value of the Christian witness through death. The author approaches an answer through a philosophical interpretation of the belief in the evidential role of martyrdom. Numerous historical documents confirm that ancient martyrdom might have been considered as a kind of proof also by people unaffiliated with the Church. The author observes the theology and the reality of martyrdom through the perspective of the ancient philosophy of death and radical personal transformation. He believes that the Christian stance in the face of persecutions could have been understood as the realization of the unrealized ambitions of philosophy, thereby proving indirectly the veracity of the teaching revealed by Jesus Christ.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part I: Dethroning Philosophy
- Part II: Witness as Proof
- Part III: Perfection and Death
- Part IV: Martyrdom as a Complete Conversion
- Conclusion: Faith, Knowledge, Witness
- Index
- Bibliography