Difference between revisions of "Bibliography:EBC Bibliography 0714"
(Created page with "{{EBC Bibliography entries |Name(s)=Macan, Ivan |Title=Doprinos isusovaca teološkim i filozofskim znanostima |Year=2008 |Language=hrv |Contained in=Obnovljeni život 63 (2008...") |
|||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
About Bellarmino, p. 142. | About Bellarmino, p. 142. | ||
=== Abstract <ref>From https://hrcak.srce.hr/24621 </ref>=== | === Abstract <ref>From https://hrcak.srce.hr/24621 </ref>=== | ||
+ | On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the coming of the Jesuits to Zagreb and the establishment of the Classical Gymnasium (secondary school) in this city, the author gives a condensed account of the contribution that Jesuits have made in the fields of philosophy and theology since the founding of their order until today. The essay is divided into two sections: from the establishment of the order until its abolition (Part 1) and from its reestablishment until today (Part 2). Each part is in turn divided as follows: the labours of the Jesuits in the world (in Europe particularly) and their labours in Croatia (that is, among the Croats). From the outset, the Jesuits have distinguished themselves as theologians and philosophers: Lainez, Faber and Canisius at the Tridentine Council; Clavius and Bellarmin at the Roman College; Fonseca, Suarez and Molina in Spain and Portugal. In Croatia they founded colleges which offered philosophy and theology on their curriculums. In fact the Zagreb academy developed to become the cradle of the future university. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, among prominent Jesuit figures are the champions of neoscholastics in Rome, the Austrian-German school of kerigmatic theology (Jungmann, H. Rahner, K. Rahner, Lakner) and the "new" theology in France (de Lubac, Danielou). In Croatia they founded the School of Philosophy which is today the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb. |
Latest revision as of 11:40, 21 January 2021
Macan, Ivan. Doprinos isusovaca teološkim i filozofskim znanostima. (2008).
Name(s) | Macan, Ivan |
---|---|
Title | Doprinos isusovaca teološkim i filozofskim znanostima |
Year | 2008 |
Language(s) | hrv |
Contained in | Obnovljeni život 63 (2008), 139-162 |
Bibliographic level | Paper in journal |
Digitization | https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/38774 |
About Bellarmino, p. 142.
Abstract [1]
On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the coming of the Jesuits to Zagreb and the establishment of the Classical Gymnasium (secondary school) in this city, the author gives a condensed account of the contribution that Jesuits have made in the fields of philosophy and theology since the founding of their order until today. The essay is divided into two sections: from the establishment of the order until its abolition (Part 1) and from its reestablishment until today (Part 2). Each part is in turn divided as follows: the labours of the Jesuits in the world (in Europe particularly) and their labours in Croatia (that is, among the Croats). From the outset, the Jesuits have distinguished themselves as theologians and philosophers: Lainez, Faber and Canisius at the Tridentine Council; Clavius and Bellarmin at the Roman College; Fonseca, Suarez and Molina in Spain and Portugal. In Croatia they founded colleges which offered philosophy and theology on their curriculums. In fact the Zagreb academy developed to become the cradle of the future university. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, among prominent Jesuit figures are the champions of neoscholastics in Rome, the Austrian-German school of kerigmatic theology (Jungmann, H. Rahner, K. Rahner, Lakner) and the "new" theology in France (de Lubac, Danielou). In Croatia they founded the School of Philosophy which is today the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb.