Abstract

Nicholas of Cusa (1401–1464) wrote on the government of the church ( Catholic Concordance ), on interreligious dialogue ( Peace of Religion, Scrutiny of the Quran ), on philosophical theology, and on mathematical speculations ( The Bowling Game , mathematical treatises); he also discussed these issues in many of his sermons. His principal tenets were the unity in all plurality in the world and in the various religions, and the accessibility of the divine through investigation of human thinking. Thus he influenced early modern natural theology and the atheism debate of modernity.

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