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ix | |
Introduction |
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1 | (16) |
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0.1 What Do We Mean When We Speak of the `Metaphysics of Light'? |
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1 | (6) |
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0.2 What This Book Aims to Achieve |
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7 | (1) |
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0.3 Old Wine in New Skins: From Light Language to the Concept of Light |
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8 | (9) |
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0.3.1 Boyance's Challenge |
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8 | (2) |
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0.3.2 A Challenge Still Not Met |
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10 | (3) |
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0.3.3 The Need for a Fresh Start |
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13 | (4) |
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1 `From Sight to Light': A Hexaemeral Guide for the Perplexed |
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17 | (44) |
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1.1 The Intelligibility of Hexaemeral Light |
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18 | (4) |
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1.2 The Oculocentric Thesis |
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22 | (5) |
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1.3 Three Arguments for Oculocentrism in the Hexaemeral Literature |
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27 | (20) |
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27 | (5) |
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1.3.2 A World with a View |
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32 | (6) |
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1.3.3 A Christocentric Vision of Creation |
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38 | (9) |
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1.4 Rethinking Oculocentrism |
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47 | (14) |
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1.4.1 Narrowing down the Scope |
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47 | (2) |
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49 | (5) |
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1.4.3 From the Phenomenal to the Noumenal |
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54 | (7) |
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2 The Light of the World: Hexaemeral Physics and Anti-Physics |
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61 | (46) |
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2.1 Science at the Service of Scripture |
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62 | (9) |
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2.2 In Defence of Hexaemeral Physics |
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71 | (20) |
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2.2.1 Origen and His Legacy |
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71 | (5) |
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2.2.2 Introducing Gregory's Apology |
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76 | (3) |
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2.2.3 Approaching Nature through the Lens of Scripture: Physics as Hermeneutics |
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79 | (12) |
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91 | (16) |
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2.3.1 A Look behind the Scenes: The Hexaemeral Theory of Change |
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91 | (5) |
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2.3.2 A (Meta-)Physics of Power Causality: The Consubstantiality of Fire and Light |
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96 | (11) |
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3 The Nature of Light: The Dawn of the First Material Form |
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107 | (68) |
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3.1 Between Physics and Metaphysics: The `Immateriality of Light' |
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109 | (18) |
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3.1.1 Scriptural Questions |
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109 | (3) |
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3.1.2 Philosophical Investigations |
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112 | (6) |
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3.1.3 Cappadocian Answers |
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118 | (5) |
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123 | (2) |
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3.1.5 Hexaemeral Hermeneutics |
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125 | (2) |
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3.2 Going Ballistic: The Singularity of the Light Ray |
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127 | (13) |
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127 | (2) |
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129 | (1) |
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130 | (6) |
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136 | (2) |
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3.2.5 Introducing Field Theory |
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138 | (2) |
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3.3 The Metaxu of Light: A Metaphysical Note on the Medium |
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140 | (7) |
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140 | (1) |
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3.3.2 Transparency and Brightness |
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141 | (3) |
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3.3.3 Light Semantics as Key to Light Hermeneutics |
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144 | (3) |
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3.4 The Metaphysics of Light: A Hermeneutical Coda |
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147 | (12) |
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3.4.1 A Dual Aspect Interpretation |
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147 | (6) |
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153 | (2) |
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3.4.3 Philonic Beginnings |
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155 | (4) |
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159 | (16) |
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175 | (22) |
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A Response to a Critic, or What Is the History of Optics Really About? |
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175 | (6) |
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B What Is the Colour of Light? |
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181 | (10) |
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C `Light from Light', or What Is the Meaning of Doxa and Apaugasma? |
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191 | (6) |
Bibliography |
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197 | (1) |
I Critical Editions of Ancient Works Cited |
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197 | (14) |
II Secondary Bibliography |
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211 | (22) |
Index of Passages |
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233 | (3) |
Index of Persons and Names |
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236 | (4) |
Subject Index |
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240 | (7) |
Glossary |
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247 | |