<P>This book elucidates and engages in critical discussion of the Greek philosophical background to the work of Origen, the great third-century scholar and theologian. The author, Professor Panayiotis Tzamalikos, has long argued that Origen was in many respects an anti-Platonist, and that the clauses in Origen¿s official anathematisation in AD 553 were based on misreadings by unschooled and fanatical drumbeaters. Tzamalikos has refuted<B></B>those charges and demonstrated that they had nothing to do with Origen¿s real thought. <I>Origen and Hellenism</I> continues the argument by placing Origen¿s achievement in its correct context: Origen may have forsaken his ancestral religion and converted to Christianity when he was advanced in years, but he implicitly made much use of his Greek intellectual inheritance in composing his ground-breaking theological work, which paved the way to Nicaea.</P><P></P><P>The author¿s thesis is that, in the quest to discover the real Origen, scrutiny of thi