Edward Craig The Mind of God and the Works of Man Oxford; Oxford University Press, pp. 353 [Book Review]

Hegel Bulletin 9 (1):32-35 (1988)
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Abstract

A review of Edward Craig's book, The Mind of God and the Works of Man (1987), which sets out Craig's argument that the work of individual philosophers can only be properly understood through our familiarity with the intellectual environment in which they worked. To put this more generally, that philosophy takes place within a definite intellectual context, and that the history of ideas is necessary to understand the aims, methods, and blind-spots of this intellectual context.

Author's Profile

Mark Hannam
School of Advanced Study, University of London

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