Difference between revisions of "Cribratio Alchorani (Sifting the Koran / 1461 Cusanus), ms."

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==Abstract==
==Abstract==


Written shortly after his [[De pace fidei]] (1453), it is a response to the Qur'an (as known through the Latin translation by [[Robert of Ketton]]) "from the standpoint of the Gospel of Christ," based on the assumption that all religions have a share in the absolute truth of the one religion.  
Written shortly after his [[De pace fidei]] (1453), it is a response to the Qur'an (as known through the Latin translation by [[Robert of Ketton]]) "from the standpoint of the Gospel of Christ," based on the assumption that all religions have a share in the absolute truth of the one religion. While the arguments for the superiority of Christianity are still shown in this book, it also credits Judaism and Islam with sharing in the truth at least partially.


==Editions ==
==Editions ==
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[[Category:1461| Cusanus]]
[[Category:1461| Cusanus]]
[[Category:Scholarship|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Made in the 1460s| 1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Manuscripts|1461 Cusanus]]


[[Category:German Scholarship|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Latin language--1450s|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:German language--1450s|~1461 Cusanus]]


[[Category:Latin language|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Early Islamic Studies--1450s|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Made in the 1460s| 1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Early Islamic Studies--Latin|1461 Cusanus]]




[[Category:Early Islamic Studies|Cusanus 1461]]
[[Category:Manuscripts|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Early Islamic Studies--1400s|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Early Islamic Studies--Germany|1461 Cusanus]]


[[Category:Qur'an (text)|1461 Cusanus]]
[[Category:Qur'an (text)|1461 Cusanus]]

Latest revision as of 10:22, 23 December 2019

Cribratio Alchorani <Latin> / Sifting the Koran (1461) is a manuscript work by Nicolaus Cusanus.

Abstract

Written shortly after his De pace fidei (1453), it is a response to the Qur'an (as known through the Latin translation by Robert of Ketton) "from the standpoint of the Gospel of Christ," based on the assumption that all religions have a share in the absolute truth of the one religion. While the arguments for the superiority of Christianity are still shown in this book, it also credits Judaism and Islam with sharing in the truth at least partially.

Editions

The text widely circulated in manuscript form. In 1543 both the Latin text and the Greek version were included by Bibliander in his edition of the Qur'an.

Contents

External links