Anyone know if these are available in Logos? If not, do you know where I could get a copy?
Doesn't appear to be in Logos, not even in the Desiderius Erasmus Collection.
As for where you could get a print-based copy, try http://www.bookfinder.com -- it looks pretty pricey, even used.
Good luck!
Thanks, Rosie.
There were some books in the originally announced Erasmus collection that were later removed. I almost believe it was these. But don't ask me why; they never said.
I still had this in my Deleted mail folder from back in September:
------------------------------
We recently learned that we cannot include the followingbooks in The Desiderius Erasmus Collection:
* First Tome or Volume of the Paraphrases of Erasmus Uponthe New Testament
Thanks for the correction. I knew they were NT, but I guess he wrote more than one set of books with 'New Testament' in the title. [:)]
Thanks for the correction. I knew they were NT, but I guess he wrote more than one set of books with 'New Testament' in the title.
Yeah, I didn't know this stuff either. I had to look it up. But apparently the "Paraphrases" was his translation (paraphrase) of the NT itself, and the "Annotations" were his notes that accompanied it. Here's the description from the publisher of the latter (Brill):
Erasmus' revolutionary Latin and Greek New Testament of 1516 was accompanied by annotations intended to be brief but which were already challenging and often discursive. This edition gives them with all their variants. The years 1519, 1523, 1527 and 1535 saw those notes grow and grow in number, size and importance. Some treat just those vital minutiæ which led Aquinas, say, into error or folly when he ignored or neglected them: others form ever-expanding essays spreading over several pages and bringing Erasmus into the centre of controversy. Here, for the first time ever, the annotations are edited and dated. They now form an indispensable companion to Erasmus' letters as a major source of our knowledge of the nuances and development of his thought and scholarship.
apparently the "Paraphrases" was his translation (paraphrase) of the NT itself, and the "Annotations" were his notes that accompanied it.
I guess we need a second Erasmus Collection. (Actually, I'm guessing they already have that in their plans somewhere.)
There were some books in the originally announced Erasmus collection that were later removed. I almost believe it was these. But don't ask me why; they never said. I still had this in my Deleted mail folder from back in September: ------------------------------ We recently learned that we cannot include the following books in The Desiderius Erasmus Collection: * First Tome or Volume of the Paraphrases of Erasmus Upon the New Testament * The Seconde Tome or Volume of the Paraphrase of Erasmus Upon the New Testament
We recently learned that we cannot include the following books in The Desiderius Erasmus Collection:
* First Tome or Volume of the Paraphrases of Erasmus Upon the New Testament
Yes. I was actually very disappointed when I saw these had been removed. I still got the 17 volume collection because I wanted to try to understand how he thought. Also, it was only $25 for 17 volumes after all! I do hope they can develop another collection with the paraphrases and his annotations.