From narrative to reflection in the problem of the self To read Saint Augustine’s Confessions

  • Agustín Uña Juárez
Keywords: Philosophy, Ancient Philosophy, Medieval Philosophy, Saint Augustine, The Confessions, Memories, Confessional Literature, Human Being and Human Subjectivity

Abstract

St. Augustine’s Confessions is a very particular work. Readers and Scholars agree upon it. Therefore, it’s ‘definition’ and understanding are not so easy. These paper tries to provide an approach to the contents of this difficult writing, by means of an examination of some main special traits, arising from the particular work’s kind. And we betray also some new difficulties for it’s reading and understanding. It is hoped that these brief look to the famous Augustinian writing could offer an initial but adviser guide to it. Moreover, the formal and thematic inquiry reveal an internal dynamics of it’s structure, which moves from the autobiographycal account to the reflection (consideratio), from the story to the thinking. This aimed advance culminates at the end of the book IX, where the work’s narrative side concludes. That’s why the books X and XI reach the theoretical summit of the Confessions through their search for memory and time. Our paper ends with an exposition of the Augustinian inquiry on the human subiectivity, underlying both these books.

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Published
2008-10-10
How to Cite
Uña Juárez A. (2008). From narrative to reflection in the problem of the self To read Saint Augustine’s Confessions. Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía, 25, 211-244. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ASHF/article/view/ASHF0808110211A
Section
Estudios