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De libero arbitrio (Augustine) : ウィキペディア英語版 | De libero arbitrio (Augustine)
''De libero arbitrio'' (''libri tres'') (English: ''On Free Choice of the Will'') is a book by Augustine of Hippo about the freedom of will. Young Augustine wrote it in three volumes, one 387–389 in Rome, after his baptism, and the other two between 391 and 395, after his priestly ordination in Africa.〔David E. Roberts: ''Augustine's Earliest Writings'', in: ''The Journal of Religion'', Vol. 33, No. 3, July 1953, p. 175.〕 The author started ''De libero arbitrio'' as a part of a series of works against Manichaeism and argued in favor of aspects of Scepticism. Augustine challenged Determinism in the first volume and investigated the conditions of the existence of God and knowledge in the other two parts.〔Henry Chadwick: ''Augustine'' in: Frances Margaret Young, Lewis Ayres, Andrew Louth: ''The Cambridge History of Early Christian Literature'', CUP, Cambridge 2004, pp. 330–331.〕 ==References==
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