Abstract
The medieval Dominican Meister Eckhart, who lived at the hinge of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, occupies a curious position in the history of philosophy. To some, he sits proudly alongside Thomas Aquinas as one of the heirs of Albertus Magnus. To others, he is more of a mystic than a scholastic, with obscurantist tendencies that stand in contrast to the linguistic subtleties emerging out of the works of Duns Scotus and Ockham. In this provocative volume, Ian Alexander Moore makes the case for Eckhart as an author worth reading not just for scholars of the Middle Ages, but also for philosophers rooted in the discourses of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In order to make this case, Moore appeals...