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POR QUE AGOSTINHO NÃO É UM FILÓSOFO MEDIEVAL (E POR QUE É IMPORTANTE COMPREENDER ISSO)

Is Augustine a medieval or an ancient philosopher? Some authors advogate that he is a medieval philosopher because he played a crucial role in the absorption of Greek Philosophy into the Christian theorethical framework. While this is certainly true, it does not give us a proper way to understand the periodization of the history of philosophy. Augustine is an ancient philosopher because he belongs to the ancient world, and not to the medieval world, and the frontier is roughly established by the fall of Western Roman Empire. The facts that seem to ground both answers are well known, we should therefore have a better grasp of the question: what explains the large changes of philosophy along its history? These changes may be better understood once we see philosophy as part of the culture, and it seems clear that there are huge cultural differences between the 5th and the 11th centuries. More interesting than classifying Augustine as a medieval or as an ancient author, however, is asking better questions concerning the history of philosophy: how do philosophical traditions born and die? My proposal is to use Dan Sperber's model on the epidemiology of culture to answer this question.

Augustine; historiography of philosophy; medieval philosophy


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