An important achievement for the theological space in generally. The philological analyses like the historical information offered and the contextualisation of the texts, linked also with the underlining of the actual dimension of some works, are some of the strong points of the book of Andrew Radde-Gallwitz.
Andrew Radde-Gallwitz is Assistant Professor at the University of Notre Dame. He works on the intellectual history of Christianity from the second through the fifth centuries. With particular interest in early Christian doctrine, his research focuses on late ancient Platonism and the tradition of negative theology. He is the author of Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and the Transformation of Divine Simplicity (2009) and Basil of Caesarea
(2012).