Abstract
Margaret Miles’ work with Augustine’s Confessions offers a model for a “philosophical life,” a term used in an earlier century for a life focused on seeking wisdom. As Miles reviews her life, she traces how she has come to see in all the particularity of her experience “what really exists.” She shares many scenes from her life, but most striking is her frank exploration of sexual experience in its complexities as a doorway to the kind of knowing that leads us to gratitude. She found Plotinus’ understanding of what really exists as the “surround-love of the All” most useful. This review describes how her autobiography permits fresh thinking and talking about God among those of us with a modern worldview.
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References
Augustine (1963). The Confessions of St. Augustine. Trans. Rex Warner. New York: New American Library.
Miles, M. R. (2011). Augustine and the Fundamentalist’s Daughter. Eugene: Cascade Books.
Plotinus (1966–1988). Enneads. 7 vols. Leob Classical Library. Trans. A. H. Armstrong. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
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Wire, H. A Book to Think With: Margaret Miles’ Augustine and the Fundamentalist’s Daughter . Pastoral Psychol 62, 387–391 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11089-012-0495-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11089-012-0495-3