Jewish Studies

David T. Runia

Philo of Alexandria

Collected Studies 1997–2021

[Philon von Alexandria. Gesammelte Studien 1997−2021.]

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Published in English.
This volume offers a collection of twenty-six studies by David T. Runia on the writings and thought of Philo of Alexandria. The author examines key areas of Philo's thought and illuminates contemporary writings of the New Testament and Second Temple Judaism.
The Jewish exegete and philosopher Philo of Alexandria (ca. 15 BCE – ca. 50 CE) has left behind by far the largest surviving body of writings of Greek speaking Judaism. Deeply loyal to his own Jewish community, Philo nevertheless has an open stance towards Greek philosophy and uses its ideas to develop his own thought as he expounds the scriptural text. The present volume brings together a collection of essays by David T. Runia on Philonic thought published between 1997 to 2021. In the first section, two introductory studies show the breadth of relevant understanding that Philo has for seven sub-disciplines of ancient and patristic studies. The essays in the second section examine Philo's knowledge of and use of Greek philosophy. One of these, Philo's reception of Plato's Phaedo , has not yet been published in English. Further studies focus on biblical interpretation in an Alexandrian context and explore theological themes relating to theodicy, divine power, and human hope. Finally, another seven studies give close readings of key Philonic texts.
Survey of contents
A. Introductory essays
B. Philo and Ancient Philosophy
C. Biblical Interpretation in an Alexandrian Context
D. Further Theological Themes
E. Studies on Philonic texts
Authors/Editors

David T. Runia Born 1951; 1976 MA University of Melbourne; 1983 LittD Free University Amsterdam; 2003 DLitt University of Melbourne; Professorial Fellow, University of Melbourne; Honorary Professor, Australian Catholic University; Professor Extraordinarius, Stellenbosch University, South Africa.
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4020-5249

Reviews

The following reviews are known:

In: Judaica. Neue digitale Folge — 5 (2024) (Vassiliki Pothou)
In: Theologische Literaturzeitung — 149 (2024), pp. 291–293 (Markus Witte)
In: Bryn Mawr Classical Review — https://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2024/2024.02.31/ (John Dillon)