ABSTRACT

Simone Weil (1909–1943) is one of the most brilliant and unorthodox religious and philosophical minds of the twentieth century. She was also a political activist, worked in the Renault car factory in France in the 1930s and fought briefly as an anarchist in the Spanish Civil War, before her tragic early death in England at the age of thirty-four. Her work spans an astonishing variety of subjects, from ancient Greek philosophy and Christianity to oppression, political freedom and French national identity.

Intimations of Christianity Among the Ancient Greeks sees Weil apply her unique and piercing intellect to early Greek thought, where she finds fundamental precursors to Christian religious ideas. She argues, provocatively, that concepts fundamental to Christianity such as incarnation, redemption, suffering and resurrection are Greek as well as Christian and that there is much we can learn, spiritually and philosophically, from their entwinement.

This Routledge Classics edition includes a new Foreword by Christopher Hamilton.

chapter 1|10 pages

God's Quest for Man 1

chapter 3|7 pages

Antigone 1

chapter 4|30 pages

The Iliad, Poem of Might 1

Homer

chapter 5|4 pages

Zeus and Prometheus 1

chapter 6|14 pages

Prometheus 1

chapter 7|16 pages

God in Plato 1

chapter 8|16 pages

Divine Love in Creation 1

chapter 9|25 pages

The Symposium of Plato 1

chapter 10|19 pages

The Republic 1

chapter 11|48 pages

The Pythagorean Doctrine 1

chapter 12|7 pages

A Sketch of a History of Greek Science 1