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Title: VII. Classical Philosophy and the


1
VII. Classical Philosophy and the
  • High Middle Ages

2
VII.A. Scholasticism
  • A method, not a creed
  • Examination of authoritative texts
  • Comparison of contradictory statements, so as
    to find the underlying unity
  • Priority of reason

3
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • The son of a prosperous landowner in the Italian
    Alps
  • A monk and later the abbot at Bec in Normandy
    (France)
  • The most luminous mind in the Western Church
    between Augustine and Aquinas
  • Became archbishop of Canterbury in 1089.
  • The father of Scholasticism

4
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Faith seeking understanding
  • (Fides quaerens intellectum)

5
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Proslogion
  • Neoplatonic influences
  • A top-down way of thinking
  • God as the supreme good
  • God as simple, not composed of parts
  • God as separate from time

6
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Proslogion
  • Gods illumination as the key to understanding

7
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Proslogion
  • Paradoxes in Gods character
  • Omnipotence and inability
  • Mercy and impassibility
  • Mercy and justice

8
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Gaunilo, On Behalf of the Fool
  • A painting that exists only in the mind of the
    artist
  • An island that can be imagined but does not exist
  • In neither case does the ability to imagine or
    understand the thing signified mean that it
    actually exists.

9
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • Reply to Gaunilo
  • God must be without beginning.
  • God is not just the most perfect example of a
    certain genre.

10
VII.B. Anselm (1033-1109)
  • An Anselmian exercise --
  • Something is true because it is affirmed in the
    Bible.
  • Something is affirmed in the Bible because it is
    true.

11
VII.C. Scholasticism after Anselm
  • 12th Century Three Major Changes
  • Problems with the patristic consensus
  • Increased contact with Judaism and Islam
  • Rise in heresy and schism within the Western
    Church

12
VII.C. Scholasticism after Anselm
  • The Challenge of Aristotelianism
  • Averroes (1126-1198)
  • Distinction between faith, theology, and
    philosophy
  • Eternality of the world
  • Only one active intellect in the universe

13
VII.C. Scholasticism after Anselm
  • 13th Century Responses to Aristotle
  • The conservative response
  • Sought to preserve Augustinian thought
  • Used Aristotle only for logic
  • Best represented by Bonaventure (ca. 1217-1274)
  • The innovative response
  • Reconstructed Augustinian theology on an
    Aristotelian basis
  • Best represented by Thomas Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)

14
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • A Dominican monk from near Naples, Italy.
  • Studied and then taught scholastic theology in
    Paris and Cologne.
  • Divided his last two decades between teaching in
    Paris and being a monastic adviser in Italy.
  • Stopped writing as a result of a mysterious
    experience on Dec. 6, 1273.

15
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Theologiae (1265-72)
  • Originally intended for Dominicans who were not
    planning to study in a university.
  • Consists of four parts
  • God (his one essence and three persons) and the
    procession of creatures from God (prima I)
  • The return of humanity to God in general the
    purpose of human life (prima secundae I-II)
  • The return of humanity to God in particular the
    cardinal virtues (secunda secundae II- II)
  • Christ as the way to return to God (tertia III)

16
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Theologiae
  • Each part consists of questions ( topics), and
    each topic consists of articles ( questions)
  • Each article consists of five sections
  • Title (formulation of the question)
  • Objections to Thomas position on the question
  • Thomas position
  • Proof of Thomas position
  • Answers to objections

17
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Theologiae
  • Priority of revelation/theology
  • Distinction between theology and philosophy

18
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Theologiae
  • Gods existence is NOT self-evident.
  • Gods existence is known through effects.
  • The Five Ways
  • Motion
  • Cause
  • Possibility/Necessity
  • Gradation
  • Governance

19
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Contra Gentiles (ca. 1256)
  • Ways something can be predicated of two different
    subjects
  • Univocally (if it is true of both subjects in the
    same way)
  • Equivocally (if it is true of the two subjects in
    completely different ways)
  • Analogically (if it is true of one subject in a
    way that is similar to, but less than, the way it
    is true of the other subject)

20
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Contra Gentiles
  • Nothing is predicated of God and us univocally
  • God is pure act.
  • God is the measure of all beings.
  • God is perfect.
  • We are like God imperfectly, by participation.
  • We can know God only negatively.

21
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Contra Gentiles
  • Nothing is predicated of God and us equivocally
  • There IS an order to the predication.
  • There is a true likeness, not merely an
    accidental one.
  • We can reason from one to the other.

22
VII.D. Aquinas (ca. 1225-1274)
  • Summa Contra Gentiles
  • Things must be predicated of God and us
    analogically
  • God is prior in terms of being.
  • We are the effects by which God is known.
  • God can thus be known by his effects.

23
VII.E. Aquinas and Aristotle in Retrospect
  • Does Aquinas make room for philosophy within
    theology, or does he make philosophy a separate
    realm?
  • Is this an appropriate way of describing faith
    and reason?
  • Can one gain accurate knowledge of God by working
    from the bottom-up?

24
VII.E. Aquinas and Aristotle in Retrospect
  • Aristotelianism down the Road
  • More thorough, careful exegesis
  • Investigation of the universe
  • Fracturing of the view of knowledge
  • Discovery of the individual
  • Enthronement of reason as the supreme authority
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