Mystical Theology: Introducing the Theology and Spiritual Life of the Orthodox Church

Gregory Palamas: Epistemological Presuppositions (Better Sound Quality), Episode 5bis, Prof. C. Veniamin

April 05, 2024 The Mount Thabor Academy Season 1 Episode 5
Gregory Palamas: Epistemological Presuppositions (Better Sound Quality), Episode 5bis, Prof. C. Veniamin
Mystical Theology: Introducing the Theology and Spiritual Life of the Orthodox Church
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Mystical Theology: Introducing the Theology and Spiritual Life of the Orthodox Church
Gregory Palamas: Epistemological Presuppositions (Better Sound Quality), Episode 5bis, Prof. C. Veniamin
Apr 05, 2024 Season 1 Episode 5
The Mount Thabor Academy

Unit 14: St. Gregory Palamas: An Introduction, Prof. Christopher Veniamin
Episode 5bis: Epistemological Presuppositions (Better Sound Quality)

Episode 5bis of “Gregory Palamas: An Introduction” is mainly an *enhanced sound quality* version of the original episode (with new title credits at the beginning, and an end card, plus an appeal for support tagged on at the end), which introduces the "Hesychast Controversy" of the 14th century in the declining decades of the Christian Roman Empire.
In this fifth part, we discuss the philosophical background to the debate between St. Gregory Palamas and Nicephorus Gregoras, which took place at the 1351 Council of Constantinople.

Themes covered in this episode include the influence of Greek philosophy (particularly that of Plato and Aristotle) on the anti-Hesychasts of the 14th century, the relevance of the debate between Nominalists and Realists in the western Middle Ages, and the experiential, non-philosophical and non-dialectical "essence-energies" distinction in the ascetic tradition of the Orthodox Church. See also the Timestamps below.

Q&As related to Episode 5 available in The Professor’s Blog.

Recommended background reading: Christopher Veniamin, ed., Saint Gregory Palamas: The Homilies (Dalton PA: 2022); The Transfiguration of Christ in Greek Patristic Literature (2022); and The Orthodox Understanding of Salvation: "Theosis" in Scripture and Tradition (2016).

Support the Show.

Dr. Christopher Veniamin

Support The Mount Thabor Academy
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“Mystical Theology", with Prof. C. Veniamin
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Unit 14: St. Gregory Palamas: An Introduction, Prof. Christopher Veniamin
Episode 5bis: Epistemological Presuppositions (Better Sound Quality)

Episode 5bis of “Gregory Palamas: An Introduction” is mainly an *enhanced sound quality* version of the original episode (with new title credits at the beginning, and an end card, plus an appeal for support tagged on at the end), which introduces the "Hesychast Controversy" of the 14th century in the declining decades of the Christian Roman Empire.
In this fifth part, we discuss the philosophical background to the debate between St. Gregory Palamas and Nicephorus Gregoras, which took place at the 1351 Council of Constantinople.

Themes covered in this episode include the influence of Greek philosophy (particularly that of Plato and Aristotle) on the anti-Hesychasts of the 14th century, the relevance of the debate between Nominalists and Realists in the western Middle Ages, and the experiential, non-philosophical and non-dialectical "essence-energies" distinction in the ascetic tradition of the Orthodox Church. See also the Timestamps below.

Q&As related to Episode 5 available in The Professor’s Blog.

Recommended background reading: Christopher Veniamin, ed., Saint Gregory Palamas: The Homilies (Dalton PA: 2022); The Transfiguration of Christ in Greek Patristic Literature (2022); and The Orthodox Understanding of Salvation: "Theosis" in Scripture and Tradition (2016).

Support the Show.

Dr. Christopher Veniamin

Support The Mount Thabor Academy
https://www.buzzsprout.com/2232462/support

THE MOUNT THABOR ACADEMY
Print Books by MOUNT THABOR PUBLISHING

The Professor's Blog

eBooks
Amazon
Google
Apple
Kobo
B&N

Membership Options

Join our Bookclub, Bible Study, John Damascene’s Christology or Greek Philosophy here:
Patreon for Membership Tiers

Click on the Join button below our YouTube videos, and become a Friend or Reader of The Mount Thabor Academy! Click here: YouTube Membership Level...

Background to the debates
Question of “Universals”
Real subsistence of Divine Energies
Realism and Nominalism
Realism
Greek Philosophy: Plato
Aristotle
No essence without energy
Porphyry and Boethius
Porphyry’s 3 questions
Boethius and “Universals”
Three Schools in West: (1) Realist
(2) Nominalist School
(3) Moderate-Realist School
Nominalism of Gregoras
Cause and caused
Philotheos Kokkinos
“Theotes”
The “twofoldness” of God
Real knowledge of God
“Energemata” - analogical assent
Energies God Himself