Christian Philosophy in the Patristic and Byzantine Tradition

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SeekingHisHeart

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I was wondering if any of my Orthodox or Eastern Catholic brothers could tell me if this book is a difficult read for a novice?

Christian Philosophy in the Patristic and Byzantine Tradition by Basil N Tatakis
 
I was wondering if any of my Orthodox or Eastern Catholic brothers could tell me if this book is a difficult read for a novice?

Christian Philosophy in the Patristic and Byzantine Tradition by Basil N Tatakis
You’ve got me interested.

I just found out this author was born in 1896, lived in Greece, was a professor of philosophy in Thessoloniki and lived for around 90 years.

The book is probably a translation, at least I would think so, you can check.

I don’t really know but I would expect it to have some depth.
 
You’ve got me interested.

I just found out this author was born in 1896, lived in Greece, was a professor of philosophy in Thessoloniki and lived for around 90 years.

The book is probably a translation, at least I would think so, you can check.

I don’t really know but I would expect it to have some depth.
thank you for your reply.

this book has been tugging on my heart for over a year now, but was a little intimidated to buy it since I have studied philosophy minimally(and honestly never liked the way it was taught-divorced from theology…I had done some reading about how the east doesn’t divorce the two so I was interested very much in the eastern churches philosophy)

I just found a review online that says it’s an “has a simplicity of its style and in-depth analysis” ishmaelite.blogspot.com/2008/02/larchets-review-of-tatakis.html
He says that it’s much simpler than it’s predecessor “Byzantine Philosophy”
 
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