Our Divine Double

Our Divine Double

by Charles M. Stang
Our Divine Double

Our Divine Double

by Charles M. Stang

Hardcover

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Overview

What if you were to discover that you were not entirely you, but rather one half of a whole, that you had, in other words, a divine double? In the second and third centuries CE, this idea gripped the religious imagination of the Eastern Mediterranean, providing a distinctive understanding of the self that has survived in various forms throughout the centuries, down to the present. Our Divine Double traces the rise of this ancient idea that each person has a divine counterpart, twin, or alter-ego, and the eventual eclipse of this idea with the rise of Christian conciliar orthodoxy.

Charles Stang marshals an array of ancient sources: from early Christianity, especially texts associated with the apostle Thomas “the twin”; from Manichaeism, a missionary religion based on the teachings of the “apostle of light” that had spread from Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean; and from Neoplatonism, a name given to the renaissance of Platonism associated with the third-century philosopher Plotinus. Each of these traditions offers an understanding of the self as an irreducible unity-in-duality. To encounter one’s divine double is to embark on a path of deification that closes the gap between image and archetype, human and divine.

While the figure of the divine double receded from the history of Christianity with the rise of conciliar orthodoxy, it survives in two important discourses from late antiquity: theodicy, or the problem of evil; and Christology, the exploration of how the Incarnate Christ is both human and divine.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674287198
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 03/07/2016
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Charles M. Stang is Professor of Early Christian Thought at Harvard Divinity School.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Narcissus and His Double 1

1 Reading Plato's Many Doubles 20

2 Thomas, Who Is Called "Twin" 64

3 Syzygies, Twins, and Mirrors 107

4 Mani and His Twin-Companion 145

5 Plotinus and the Doubled Intellect 185

6 Whither the Divine Double? 231

Conclusion 249

Notes 259

Acknowledgments 299

Index 303

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