RT Book T1 Sin, interiority, and selfhood in the twelfth-century West T2 Studies and texts JF Studies and texts A1 Kramer, Susan R. 1958- LA English PP Toronto, Ontario PB Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies YR 2015 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1618288555 AB "A common refrain in twelfth-century thought is that God alone knows the secrets of the heart. Originating in Scripture, the principle was elaborated exegetically to imply two distinct domains: one of external actions open to human perception and judgment and the other including thoughts, intentions, and sentiments--the products of internal acts--visible only to God. But changes in medieval penance, especially in the Fourth Lateran Council's demand in 1215 that all Christians fully confess their sins to a priest, reveals a shift in attitude towards the secrecy of the heart. A close reading of twelfth and thirteenth-century texts from the cathedral and monastic schools shows that oral confession was to include not only visible, external acts, but also the merely internal actions formerly limited to God's knowledge. What lay behind this shift? Should we attribute it to changes in priestly status? To the development of new techniques for breaching the heart's secrecy? Was new value placed on the secrets subject to confession? These questions are provocative because much recent scholarship implicates medieval penance in evolving western notions of selfhood and the part played by interiority in defining the self. Lateran IV's mandate to confess is characterized as a critical juncture in the history of subjectivity and the rise of a modern sense of self with its noted attributes of inwardness and autonomy. The aim of Sin, Interiority, and Selfhood in the Twelfth-Century West is to uncover the conception of self that underlay the demand that all Christians confess their innermost thoughts. Drawing on sources from the world of the medieval schools, it juxtaposes discussions that treat topics ranging from the difficulties of discerning the source of tears to the mechanics of original sin. All these discussions are linked by their underlying interest in the internal aspects of committing or remitting sin. Contextualizing these aspects of interiority allows us to see what role was assigned to internal actions in medieval definitions of the self; it also provides insight into the intellectual currents that contributed to that understanding."-- AB The secrets of the heart -- The secrecy of conscience -- Tears and the articulation of interiority -- Original sin and the autonomous soul -- Sin, contamination, and consent -- Confession and the self NO Includes bibliographical references (pages [138]-167) and index CN BT715 SN 9780888442000 SN 0888442009 K1 Sin : Christianity : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Self : Religious aspects : Christianity : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Confession : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Secrecy : Religious aspects : Christianity : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Conscience, Examination of : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Soul : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Penance : History of doctrines : Middle Ages, 600-1500