Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction: modern and medieval dreams
- 1 Dreambooks and their audiences
- 2 The doubleness and middleness of dreams
- 3 The patristic dream
- 4 From the fourth to the twelfth century
- 5 Aristotle and the late-medieval dream
- 6 Dreams and fiction
- 7 Dreams and life
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - The patristic dream
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction: modern and medieval dreams
- 1 Dreambooks and their audiences
- 2 The doubleness and middleness of dreams
- 3 The patristic dream
- 4 From the fourth to the twelfth century
- 5 Aristotle and the late-medieval dream
- 6 Dreams and fiction
- 7 Dreams and life
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
AUGUSTINE AND THE MIDDLENESS OF DREAMS
In their consideration of dream experience, late-antique and medieval writers often concentrated attention on intermediate kinds of dream and on the middle realm that those dreams especially explore. Higher and lower dreams are relatively unambiguous in their ability or inability to reveal truth; but dreams like Macrobius's somnium raise a host of tricky questions about the relationship between the divine and the mundane, truth and fiction, abstract ideas and the figural means by which those ideas may be expressed. While not always addressing such questions directly, authors tended to treat the “middle” dream, with its difficulties, more completely and complexly than less problematic dream-types.
Macrobius and Calcidius themselves repeatedly focus attention on intermediate entities. Calcidius moves away from the extreme views of Aristotle and “Heraclitus” toward a middle ground where dreams are neither wholly mundane nor fully divine. Macrobius also emphasizes middle dreams: dividing the somnium into a hierarchy of sub-species (“personal, alien, social, public, and universal,” I.iii.10), he stresses the intermediate dream's ability to address a wide range of experience, from the self-concerned to the cosmic. In his reading of Cicero's Somnium Scipionis, too, Macrobius displays a particular concern with the middle dream: while he classifies Scipio's dream as simultaneously oraculum, visio, and somnium (I.iii.12), he treats it almost exclusively as somnium. After all, oraculum and visio reveal truth directly and thus do not demand interpretation.
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- Dreaming in the Middle Ages , pp. 35 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992