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Medieval dialogues: Reason, mysticism and society

ATS4289

Synopsis

This unit examines the intellectual interaction between Judaism, Christianity and Islam in the medieval period. Focusing mainly on the late twelfth and thirteenth century, the unit revolves around a central religious fault line of the era- reason and rationalism on the one hand, and the mystical quest on the other - and pursues a comparative analysis of the major figures from each of the traditions. Beginning with the rationalists, the course explores the thought of Ibn Rushd, Maimonides and Thomas Aquinas, before moving to a comparative examination of various mystics, such as - Bernard of Clairvaux, Bonaventure, the Zohar, Meister Eckhart, Ibn al-Arabi and Rumi.

Sourced from the Monash Handbook 2026.

Quick facts

Credit points
12
Level
4
Audience
Undergraduate
Type
Coursework
School
Faculty of Arts
Faculty
Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation
Handbook year
2026

Prerequisites

No prereqs in the handbook graph.

What it unlocks

Nothing in the visible graph depends on this unit.