R. Joseph Hoffmann

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

R. Joseph Hoffmann is a historian specializing in the social and intellectual development of early Christianity. He is best known for his early controversial thesis regarding the role and dating of the heretic Marcion in the history of the New Testament canon and reconstructions of the writings of the pagan opponents of Christianity, Celsus (1987), Porphyry (1994) and Julian the Apostate (2004). Trained at Harvard, Oxford and Heidelberg, Hoffmann was Senior Scholar of St Cross College, Oxford, from 1980-1983 and taught at the University of Michigan, Oxford, the American University of Beirut and was Campbell Professor at Wells College. He has been chair of the Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion (CSER), based at The Center for Inquiry in Amherst, New York since 2003.

[edit] Selected works

[edit] External links