Nemesius of Emesa on Human Nature
A Cosmopolitan Anthropology from Roman Syria
David Lloyd Dusenbury
Reviews and Awards
"Dusenbury's work is a splendid, fresh, and creative analysis that challenges us to think differently, often imaginatively and by necessity more creatively, about what we consider to be medical philosophical discourse and its function in late antiquity." - Chris L. de Wet, University of South Africa, Review of Biblical Literature
"The book is learned and lucid, if at times a bit more didactic in the cause of lucidity than I felt absolutely necessary. It should certainly be read and digested by those tracking the interplay of philosophy and theology in the years after the Cappadocians wrote, but should also unsettle the making of teleological narratives about the outcome of that interplay." - James O'Donnell, Arizona State University, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
"David's book is a very welcome publication that throws new light on an often neglected figure of Eastern Christianity 4th century throws...the work a good starting point for an in-depth study of Nemesios and its anthropology." - Journal of Ancient Christianity