THE present volume of St. Anselm's most important philosophical and theological writings contains: (1) The Proslogium (2) the Monologium, (3) the Cur Deus Homo, and (4) by way of historical complement, an Appendix to the Monologium entitled In Behalf of the Fool by Gaunilon, a monk of Marmoutiers. The Proslogium (which, though subsequent in point of time to the Monologium, is here placed first, as containing the famous ontological argument), the Monologium and the Appendix thereto were translated by Mr. Sidney Norton Deane, of New Haven, Conn.; the Cur Deus Homo was rendered by James Gardiner Vose, formerly of Milton, Conn., and later of Providence, R. I., and published in 1854 and 1855 in the Bibliotheca Sacra, then issued at Andover, Mass., by Warren F. Draper.
Copyright: Public Domain
CCEL Identifier: ccel/anselm/basic_works/1.05
How to Reference This Edition: Wheaton, IL: Christian Classics Ethereal Library, 1999-01-01, v1.05, URL http://ccel.wheaton.edu/a/anselm/basic_works/About.htm
Pub History: The 1962 edition is identical to the 1926 edition in every respect except the published year. The 1926 edition is used here. Copyright date 1903.
Published: La Salle, Ill., Open Court Pub. Co., 1926, 2d. ed.
Copy Location:Buswell Library, 189.4
Revision History: v1.05: revised for ThML0.99, 1/1/99
Element | Scheme | Content |
DC.Title.Main | Basic writings: Proslogium; Monologium; Gaunilon's on behalf of the fool; Cur deus homo. | |
DC.Title.Alternative | Selected works. English | |
DC.Creator | Anselm, Saint, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1033-1109 | |
DC.Creator.Alternative | Deane, S. N. (Sidney Norton), 1878-1943, tr. | |
DC.Subject | LCSH | |
DC.Subject | CCEL | Classics; Roman Catholic |
DC.Description | THE present volume of St. Anselm's most important philosophical and theological writings contains: (1) The Proslogium (2) the Monologium, (3) the Cur Deus Homo, and (4) by way of historical complement, an Appendix to the Monologium entitled In Behalf of the Fool by Gaunilon, a monk of Marmoutiers. The Proslogium (which, though subsequent in point of time to the Monologium, is here placed first, as containing the famous ontological argument), the Monologium and the Appendix thereto were translated by Mr. Sidney Norton Deane, of New Haven, Conn.; the Cur Deus Homo was rendered by James Gardiner Vose, formerly of Milton, Conn., and later of Providence, R. I., and published in 1854 and 1855 in the Bibliotheca Sacra, then issued at Andover, Mass., by Warren F. Draper. | |
DC.Publisher | Wheaton, IL: Christian Classics Ethereal Library | |
DC.Publisher.Address | URL | maildo:[email protected] |
DC.Publisher | CCEL | CCEL |
DC.Contributor.Markup | Wendy Huang | |
DC.Date.Created | ISO8601 | 1999-01-01 |
DC.Type | Text.Monograph | |
DC.Format | IMT | text/html |
DC.Identifier | CCEL | ccel/anselm/basic_works/1.05.htm |
DC.Identifier | http://ccel.wheaton.edu/a/anselm/basic_works/About.htm | |
DC.Subject | LCCS | B765.A82E54 1926 |
DC.Subject | DDC | 189.4 |
DC.Source | Published | La Salle, Ill., Open Court Pub. Co., 1926, 2d. ed. |
DC.Language | ISO639-1 | en |
DC.Rights | Public Domain |