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Nicholas of Cusa (Reason and Wisdom in Medieval Christianity)

Beatrice Institute is co-sponsoring this event hosted by Lumen Christi.

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This event is free and open to the public. Online registration is required. Registrants will receive a link to the webinar via email.

Join us for the final installment of our Spring 2020 lecture series on "Reason and Wisdom in Medieval Christian Thought." Professor David Albertson wil lead us in exploring the work of German philosopher, theologian, astronomer, and mystic, Nicholas of Cusa.

Nicholas of Cusa (d. 1464) was a great late medieval, early modern thinker and polymath who digested the medieval theological and contemplative traditions and pressed these in new directions. Living in tumultuous times, his career in the Church as a cardinal was occupied by his work as a reformer and his efforts to re-unify the Eastern and Western Churches. Professor David Albertson will offer an introduction to the lesser-known but rich life and thought of this great German personality.

This lecture is part of our Spring Webinar Series on "Reason and Wisdom in Medieval Christian Thought"

What can reason discover about God? Are there other possible ways to know God? Medieval Christians undertook great rational enterprises—including the sharp logic of Abelard and the grand system of Thomas Aquinas—as well as practiced experiential and contemplative modes of knowing, as did Bernard of Clairvaux. This course will examine how different preeminent medieval Christian thinkers saw the relationship between reason and wisdom, how to arrive at them, and so how to seek the face of God.

This series is cosponsored by the Collegium Institute, the Nova Forum, the Saint Benedict Institute, the Beatrice Institute, the Harvard Catholic Center, and the Calvert House Catholic Center.