111 pp.
ISBN 0-919473-56-3
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Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464) was a theologian, philosopher, Canon lawyer, and Church reformer. Born in Kues, Germany, and educated in Italy and Germany, Cusanus stands on the border between medieval scholasticism and Renaissance philosophy. Although he is deeply influenced by medieval writers including Albert the Great, Ramon Lull, and Meister Eckhart, he eschews the scholastic method of composition, often preferring the dialogue form favoured by humanists. Cusanus dedicates his philosophical writings to the exploration of the limits of the mind in its pursuit of absolute truth. The lack of proportion between the limits of human reason and the infinity of absolute truth means that man can only have an approximate knowledge of God and the eternal truths that exist in the divine mind. Recognising the limits of reason stimulated Cusanus to develop a new philosophical analysis of mind that depends heavily on grasping the superior power of the human intellect over that of reason. The intuitive power of the intellect allows man to step over the limits of calculative reason and by employing a method Cusanus calls "learned ignorance" to develop a new logic of infinity. This new way of thinking, often expressed in mathematical symbols and analogies, is designed to develop human insight into the infinity of God.
Professor M.L. Führer is chairman of the department of philosophy at Augsburg College in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has taught and published in the area of medieval philosophy in general with a special interest in Nicholas of Cusa. He has written principally about Cusanus' theory of mind and the role it plays in his mysticism. His articles have appeared in learned Journals in the United States, Britain and Europe.