Papers on Aquinas at Kalamazoo 2007

Here is a list of papers on St Thomas that are scheduled at this year's Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, MI:

Thursday, May 10, 2007

  • The Theory of Transcendentals in Aquinas and His Islamic Predecessors (Yoshihisa Yamamoto, Catholic Univ. of America)
  • Reason, Ignorance, and Faith: Is It Better Not to Know Too Much before Believing? (Gregory J. Coulter, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston)
  • Aquinas on the Justification of Faith (Carl N. Still, St. Thomas More College, Univ. of Saskatchewan)
  • Thomas Aquinas and the Possibilities of a Post-Modern Phenomenology of Faith (Randall Smith, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston)
  • A Good Corpse: Why Dead Faith Is Not Evil (Steven Jensen, Wheeling Jesuit Univ.)
  • Aquinas on the Heretic's Assent to the Articles of Faith (Michael V. Dougherty, Ohio Dominican Univ.)
  • Infidelity and Good Actions (Thomas Osborne Jr., Center for Thomistic Studies)
  • Faith and Philosophy in Thomas Aquinas's Account of the Procession in God (Anthony James Carey, U.S. Air Force Academy)
  • The Five Uses of Philosophy in the Two Modes of Sacred Theology (Matthew Ryan McWhorter, Ave Maria Univ.)
  • Charity and Happiness: An Aporia in Aquinas? (Christopher J. Malloy, Univ. of Dallas)

Friday, May 11, 2007

  • The Fruits of Contemplation: Jesus, Sacra Doctrina, and the Vision of God in the Lectura super Ioannem of Thomas Aquinas (R. William Carroll, Independent Scholar)
  • Saint Thomas and Metaphysical Hierarchy (Lawrence Dewan, OP, Dominican College of Philosophy and Theology)
  • Finis Cui or Finis Quo: Saint Thomas and William of Moerbeke on De anima II.4 (Gerald Malsbary, St. Charles Borromeo Seminary)
  • Aquinas as Reader of Aristotle's Rhetoric (Kevin White, Catholic Univ. of America)
  • Aquinas and the Transcendent Power of the Passions (Michael R. Miller, Mount St. Mary's Univ.)
  • Resistance to the Demands of Love, Part II: Secular Analogues to Aquinas's Spiritual Sloth (Rebecca Konyndyk DeYoung, Calvin College)
  • Time and History in Aquinas )Montague Brown, St. Anselm College
  • Saint Thomas and the Infinity of Grace (David Liberto, Notre Dame Seminary)
  • The Church as the Image of the Trinity: Does the Unity of God Distort the Theology of the Church (Matthew Levering, Ave Maria Univ.)
  • Aquinas on Grace, Free Will, and Original Sin: A Maimonidean Reading (John Y. B. Hood, Independent Scholar)
  • Is Logic a Contemplative Science? Aquinas's Point of View (Bruno Tremblay, St. Jerome's Univ.)
  • An Assessment of Martin Grabmann's Reading of Aquinas on the Divine Ground of Our Truth-Knowing (Matthew Cuddeback, Providence College)
  • Thomas Aquinas on Angels and the Subject of Metaphysics (Travis Cooper, College of St. Thomas More)

Saturday, May 12 2007

  • Legal Injustice in the Thomist Tradition and the Case of Civil Disobedience (Justin B. Dyer, Univ. of Texas–Austin)
  • The Relation of Language and Logic in Farabi and Aquinas (Mostafa Younesie, Tarbiat Modares Univ.)

Sunday, May 13, 2007

I can't find any!

This is, admittedly, as narrow view of the work that might be of interest and indeed crucial use to Thomists. There is, for instance, a session on Peter Lombard, sporting a paper by none other than Philipp W. Roseman.

2 Comments

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

Conference on metaphysics of Aquinas in Rome

logoupra.gifThis is just in from Prof. Jésus Villagrasa L.C. of the Ateneo Pontificio Regina Apostolorum in Rome. They’re co-hosting a one-day conference on March 20, 2007 entitled “Creazione e actus essendi. Originalità e interpretazioni della metafisica di Tommaso d’Aquino”. Here is the program. If I could make it, I would be particularly looking forward to the papers on the “Patristic sources of the metaphysics of Aquinas” and “The ontological difference in 20th century Thomism”!

In addition the “Progetto Culturale Cornelio Fabro”, in charge of the edition of the collected works of the Italian Thomist Cornelio Fabro (see our Newsletter of March 2005), will present the edition of Fabro’s “Breve introduzione al tomismo”.

 

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Jörgen Vijgen

DR. JÖRGEN VIJGEN holds academic appointments in Medieval and Thomistic Philosophy at several institutions in the Netherlands. His dissertation, “The status of Eucharistic accidents ‘sine subiecto’: An Historical Trajectory up to Thomas Aquinas and selected reactions,” was written under the direction of Fr. Walter Senner, O.P. at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum) in Rome, Italy and published in 2013 by Akademie Verlag (now De Gruyter) in Berlin, Germany.

Update on Ave Maria conference “Sacraments in Aquinas”

Last February I posted about an upcoming conference at Ave Maria University, in Naples, Florida, to take place in February, 2007. A change in the dates for the conference resulted in a little shuffling of the speakers, so here is the full line-up for the conference (to take place February 1-3, 2007: see more at the Ave Maria website):

Avery Cardinal Dulles, SJ
Fordham University, Keynote Address
Reinhard Hütter
Duke University Divinity School, Closing Address

  • Sr. Thomas Augustine Becker, OP, Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist
  • Bernhard Blankenhorn, OP, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology
  • John Boyle, University of St. Thomas (MN)
  • Romanus Cessario, OP, St. John's Seminary
  • Michael Dauphinais, Ave Maria University
  • Barry David, Ave Maria University
  • Benoît-Dominique de La Soujeole, OP, University of Fribourg
  • Gilles Emery, OP, University of Fribourg
  • Thomas Hibbs, Baylor University
  • Mark Johnson, Marquette University
  • Joseph Koterski, SJ, Fordham University
  • Peter Kwasniewski, International Theological Institute
  • Matthew L. Lamb, Ave Maria University
  • Michael Lang, London Oratory
  • Matthew Levering, Ave Maria University
  • Steven Long, Ave Maria University
  • Bruce Marshall, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University
  • Robert Miner, Baylor University
  • Sébastian Perdrix OP, Dominican House of Studies, Washington, DC
  • Lauren Pristas, Caldwell College
  • Richard Schenk, OP, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology
  • Mary Catherine Sommers, Center for Thomistic Studies
  • Michael Waldstein, International Theological Institute, Gaming, Austria
  • Thomas Weinandy, OFM Cap, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

Matthew Levering has a nice interview about the conference in PDF format, and the precise schedule and titles of papers is also in PDF format. See you there?

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

Journée saint Thomas d’Aquin (2 décembre 2006)

Just in from Adriano Oliva and Ruedi Imbach, the (delayed) announcement of the “Journée thomiste” in Paris, on December 2, 2006. Here’s what will take place:

  • Accueil
  • Dr. Valérie CORDONIER (Fribourg CH), « Piscis stupefactor ». La physique de Simplicius et d’Averroès chez Thomas d’Aquin
  • Prof. Walter SENNER, OP (Rome), Verité chez s. Thomas d’Aquin: pas seulement un concept logique
  • Prof. Ruedi IMBACH (Paris), Thomas d’Aquin citant Averroès: quelques observations
  • Présentation de quelques livres, par Ruedi IMBACH et Adriano OLIVA, OP
More information about the day’s events and costs can be found in the PDF Fr Oliva sent along.
Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

American Maritain Association meeting in Nashville (November 2-5, 2006)

The American Maritain Association will hold its 2006 Annual Conference at Aquinas College/Loews Vanderbilt Hotel, 2100 W End Ave, Nashville, TN, from November 2-5, 2006, on the topic “Nature, Science and Wisdom: The Role of the Philosophy of Nature”. The PDF for the conference schedule can be found here.

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

The University of Toronto Colloquium in Mediaeval Philosophy 2006

Friday, 22 September:

4:30 - 6:30 opening remarks

SESSION I: Chair, Stephen Dumont (University of Notre Dame)

Hester Gelber (Stanford University): “The Fate of Providence”

Neil Lewis (Georgetown University), commentary

6:30 reception

Saturday, 23 September:

10:00 - 12:00

SESSION II: Chair, Robert Wisnovsky (McGill University)

Peter Adamson (King’s College, London): “The Baghdad Peripatetics and the Knowledge of Universals”

Richard Taylor (Marquette University), commentary

lunch break

2:30 - 4:30

SESSION III: Chair, Jorge Gracia (SUNY Buffalo)

Gareth Matthews (U. Mass. Amherst): “On the Very Idea of Infused Virtues”

Eleonore Stump (St. Louis University), commentary

7:00 Conference Dinner (reservation required)

All sessions will be held in Alumni Hall, Room 400 (St. Michael’s College, 121 St. Joseph Street). The sessions are free and open to the public. If you plan to attend please let us know: medieval.philosophy@utoronto.ca and be sure to let us know if you intend to participate in the conference dinner!

The colloquium is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, Department of Classics, and Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto; University of St. Michael’s College; Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.

Information about the conference is available online at: http://chass.utoronto.ca/~cpamp/pages/utcmp.html.

Organizers: Deborah Black, Peter King, Martin Pickave.

Accomodations:

The Holiday Inn Midtown in Toronto, located on Bloor Street next to the St. George campus, is offering rooms at a reduced rate for the conference.

Please reserve online at Toronto’s Holiday Inn Midtown using the Corporate ID #100217931.

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

Conference: Jacques Maritain's Aesthetics and Modern Art

From Rajesh Heynickx in Belgium comes the following conference announcement:

Jacques Maritain’s Neo-Thomist Aesthetics and European Modernist Art Circles during the Interwar Period


International Conference, 12-13 May 2006
Royal Flemish Academy of Arts and Sciences of Belgium
Paleis der Academiën, Hertogstraat 1, 1000 Brussels

In recent literature on cultural history and art theory, modernist art of the first half of the twentieth century has not been viewed purely as a product of rationalism. That all too simplistic reading has been replaced by a dissection of the cultural, social and also religious background of modernist aesthetics. For modernist artists, a belief in instrumental reason, order and functionalism did not preclude the importance of myth, history and spirituality. Less well known is the fact that, besides esoteric mysticism or theosophical movements, a traditional religious frame of reference as Catholicism - often in a non-conformist version - appealed to the imagination. This is evident in the influence wielded by the French philosopher Jacques Maritain [1882-1973] on many European modernists. In the 1920s and 1930s, his cultural criticism [Antimodern, 1922, Religion et Culture, 1930] and certainly his reflections on aesthetics [Art et Scolastique, 1921] enjoyed wide interest in artistic and intellectual circles.

The Neo-Thomist philosophy promoted by Maritain, and specifically his philosophy of art, seems to have spoken to many modernist artists. The composer Igor Stravinsky consulted Maritain before formulating his theory of art and considered converting to Catholicism. The French poet, writer and filmmaker Jean Cocteau did also that in the 1920s. For the painter Gino Severini, a pioneer of Futurism, and otto Van Rees, one of the first Dadaists - both converts - Maritain played the
role of spiritual counsellor. And when the promoter of abstract art Michel Seuphor embraced Catholic faith in the early 1930s he, too, had extensive contact with Maritain. For these artists, the dictum of the Irish modernist poet Brian Coffey, once a doctoral student under Maritain, applied: modern art needs a Thomist conceptual framework.

However, besides admiration, Maritain also provoked irritation with his theories. He was accused by some of being a charlatan who sought to appropriate the work of others, and for this reason surrounded himself with artists in his house in the Paris suburb of Meudon. Maritain, so the story went, was out to place modern art under the glass bell-jar of Catholicism. The fact that Maritain met with both praise and vilification speaks volumes. It reveals how the Catholic religion continued to be an important factor within the development of modern art. The protest and the adoration that arose around the figure of Maritain lays bare a crucial debate about the role of religion in modern art [and art
theory]. In order to arrive at an understanding of the main issues and the development of that debate, Maritain’s conceptions must be approached from a double perspective. This entails the analysis of the networks [friendships and his indirect aderents] that he developed through Europe, and of his criticisms [views of criticasters].

Maritain can function as a lense for examining, comparing and understanding a number of crucial dimensions of the aesthetic theories and religiously-inspired cultural criticism of European modernists. Research into the reception and the perception of Maritain not only tells us something about Maritain the person; an analysis of the many kinds of perception and reception which Maritain’s ideas met, can also shed light on the hybrid character of the modernism of the first half
of the twentieth century. To begin with, it can be shown that modernist art often depended on a metaphysical conception of beauty. In the second place, an insight can be gained into the fact that within modernism, a regressive utopia, based on neo- Thomism, was able to make its presence felt. Archaic, even reactionary elements such as an interest in the pious Middle Ages, were seen to be compatible with a belief in progress. An analysis of the reception and perception of Maritain therefore offers the opportunity to re-write the history of modern art and culture by relating it to aspects that are too often separated from it.

Programme

Friday 12 May 2006

09:00 Registration
1. Les grandes amitiés
Belgium: Wallonia [1], Flanders [2], beyond Flanders [3]

09:30 Welcome by Carlos Steel [K.U.Leuven] Introduction and programme outline
09:50 [1] Cécile Vanderpelen-Diagre [ULB] "Codifier la littérature?" Maritain and the Catholic Writers in French Speaking Belgium
10:30 [2] Jan De Maeyer [KADOC-K.U.Leuven] Towards a Modern Religious Art: the Limit Case of Albert Servaes
11:10 Break
11:40 [3] Rajesh Heynickx [K.U.Leuven] “Ma seule nostalgie de Paris”. Michel Seuphor in his mid-thirties: a missionary of Jacques Maritain
12:20 Discussion
13:00 Lunch

Afternoon:

France [4], England [5], The Netherlands [6]
02:30 Rajesh Heynickx [K.U.Leuven] Introduction and Programme outline
02:40 [4] Stephen Schloesser [Boston College, USA] “Ernest Psichari m’a précédé sur votre terre de Belgique”: Mystic Modernism as réparation
03:20 [5] Alex Davis [University College Cork, Ireland] Neo-Thomism and Modernist Poetry: the Case of Brian Coffey
04:00 Break
04:30 [6] Mathijs Sanders [Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, The Netherlands] Literature and the Cult of Youth: Pieter van der Meer de Walcheren
05:10 Discussion

Saturday 13 May 2006: Confrontations

09:00 Dirk De Geest [K.U.Leuven] Introduction and Programme outline
09:10 Carlos Steel [K.U.Leuven] The Thomistic Aesthetics of Jacques Maritain
09:50 Stephane Symons [K.U.Leuven] Artistic Theology: Walter Benjamin and Jacques Maritain
10:30 Break
11:00 Michael Einfalt [Universität Freiburg, Germany] Jacques Maritain, Ernst Robert Curtius and André Gide: Literary Autonomy and Cultural Criticism
11:40 Jason Harding [Âbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland] “The Just Impartiality of the Christian Philosopher”. Jacques Maritain and The Criterion
12:20 Discussion
12:50 Carlos Steel, Jan De Maeyer, Rajesh Heynickx General Conclusions and Debate

Practical information

Venue: Royal Flemish Academy of Arts and Sciences of Belgium, Paleis der Academiën, Hertogstraat 1, 1000 Brussel [beside the Royal Palace]

Dates: Friday 12 & Saturday 13 May 2006
Languages: Lectures will be given in English. No simultaneous interpreting is provided.
Proceedings: The proceedings of the conference will be published.
The Fee: Participating in the whole symposium costs EUR 25,- if you register before April 23, 2006. After that date the fee will be EUR 35,-. This includes the symposium brochure, lunch on Friday, coffee and light refreshments, but NOT housing.

Reduced student fee:
EUR 10,-. Fee per day
EUR 20,- on Friday
EUR 15,- on Saturday

Payment: Payment can be made on the spot in cash or with a credit card [Visa or Euro card].
Accomodation: For accommodation in Brussels, contact:
Grote Markt, 1000 Brussel
T + 32 [0]2 513 89 0 - F + 32 [0]2 513 83 20
E-mail : tourism@brusselsinternational.be or
mice@brusselsinternational.be
Website: www.brusselsinternational.be

More information: Magda Pluymers  T +32 16 32 35 11 - F +32 16 32 35 01

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics in the Thomistic and Analytic Traditions

From Matt O’Brien, a graduate student of philosophy at UTexas, comes a note about a conference on "Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics in the Thomistic and Analytic Traditions," to be held this summer, at Princeton University (August 7–11, 2006). Here’s an explanation from the web site for the conference, which is intended for graduate students:

Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics in the Thomistic and Analytic Traditions is a summer graduate seminar devoted to promoting intellectual exchange between the philosophical tradition inspired by Thomas Aquinas, broadly understood, and contemporary analytic philosophy. The modern revival of Thomism in Catholic circles began with the 1879 encyclical letter Aeterni Patris, and was exemplified in the work of Jacques Maritain and Etienne Gilson during the first half of the twentieth century. Beginning in the mid-twentieth century, that revival was broadened as philosophers such as Peter Geach, Elizabeth Anscombe, Anthony Kenny, and Philippa Foot began to draw upon the insights of Aquinas (and Aristotle) within the context of contemporary analytic philosophy. The work of these philosophers and others has shown how the Thomistic tradition can inspire original, valuable contributions to contemporary debates, and often calls into question how the very issues of contemporary philosophy are themselves conceived.

The faculty for the seminar include:

  • Nicholas Rescher
  • Alexander Pruss
  • Gabriele De Anna
  • Mark C. Murphy
  • Michael Gorman

An exciting opportunity.

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

The Sacraments and Aquinas at Ave Maria University (Feb. 2007)

The folks at Ave Maria University in Naples, Florida, have done it again, planning a splendid conference on "Sacraments in Aquinas," to be held February 8-10, 2007. Here is the blurb and speakers list that Matthew Levering sent to me:

Sacraments in Aquinas

With some exceptions, very little work has been done on Aquinas’s sacramental and liturgical theology in the past few decades. In recent years, however, philosophical and theological interest in Aquinas’s sacramental theology and theological of the liturgy seems to be significantly increasing in ecumenical circles. Now seems an auspicious time to plan for a conference that would illumine the contributions of Aquinas, and the medieval tradition to which he belongs, in this area.

Speakers include

  • Avery Cardinal Dulles, SJ, Fordham University, Keynote Address
  • Reinhard Hütter, Duke University Divinity School, Closing Address
  • Sr. Thomas Augustine Becker, OP, Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist
  • Bernhard Blankenhorn, OP, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology
  • Serge-Thomas Bonino, OP, Revue Thomiste
  • John Boyle, University of St. Thomas (MN)
  • Sarah Byers , Ave Maria University
  • Romanus Cessario, OP, St. John’s Seminary
  • Michael Dauphinais , Ave Maria University
  • Barry David, Ave Maria University
  • Benoît-Dominique de La Soujeole, OP, University of Fribourg
  • Gilles Emery, OP, University of Fribourg
  • Paul Gondreau, Providence College
  • Thomas Hibbs, Baylor University
  • Joseph Koterski, SJ, Fordham University
  • Peter Kwasniewski, International Theological Institute
  • Matthew L. Lamb, Ave Maria University
  • Michael Lang, London Oratory
  • Matthew Levering, Ave Maria University
  • Steven Long, Ave Maria University
  • Christopher Malloy, University of Dallas
  • Bruce Marshall, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University
  • Robert Miner, Baylor University
  • R. Trent Pomplun, Loyola College in Maryland
  • Lauren Pristas, Caldwell College
  • Richard Schenk, OP, Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology
  • Henk Schoot, Thomas Instituut te Utrecht
  • Joseph Wawrykow, University of Notre Dame
  • Thomas Weinandy, OFM Cap, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

I’m sure that their website will soon have more details. February in Florida sounds pretty good right now…

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

Société thomiste announces Journée saint Thomas d’Aquin (December 3, 2005)

This just in, from Adriano Oliva, OP, and Ruedi Imbach: The Société thomiste will be holding its annual Journée saint Thomas d’Aquin this year on December 3, 2005, in Paris (Couvent Saint-Jacques, 20 rue des Tanneries, Paris 13).

Here are the presentations to take place:

10:00 — Prof. Fr. Jean-Pierre TORRELL, OP (Fribourg CH): LE COMPENDIUM THEOLOGIAE DE S. THOMAS. DATES – STRUCTURE – CONTENU – PROBLEMES: Le Compendium écrit par Thomas pour son ami Raynald, est une œuvre qui gagne à être connue. Semblable en intention à l’Enchiridion de S. Augustin, il occupe dans l’œuvre de l’Aquinate une place originale et il est assez différent de ses grands ouvrages. Il en reprend pourtant tous les grands thèmes et c’est une remarquable introduction à la pensée du Maître.

11:30 — Fr. Emmanuel PERRIER, OP (Toulouse – Fribourg CH): LA PUISSANCE NOTIONNELLE DANS LA THEOLOGIE TRINITAIRE DE SAINT THOMAS : UNE DOCTRINE DE LA FECONDITE DIVINE ? Parler d’une puissance notionnelle revient à viser la propriété la plus intime de la nature divine, celle dont les actes notionnels – la génération du Fils, la spiration de l’Esprit – sont la manifestation : Dieu est tel que le Père produit de manière immanente un Fils égal à lui et distinct de lui. Telle est la voie empruntée par saint Thomas dans son commentaire des Sentences, que l’on ne peut s’empêcher de rapprocher de la fécondité divine mise en valeur par saint Bonaventure. Cette doctrine, originale dans le paysage médiéval, retrouve les grands traits de l’argumentation que Grégoire de Nysse avait opposée à Eunome au IVe siècle. Or, l’évolution de l’Aquinate jusqu’à la Somme de Théologie est marquée par l’abandon progressif de cette perspective, à laquelle il semblait pourtant très attaché. Dès lors, la question se pose de savoir si une telle évolution résulte d’un renoncement ou d’un approfondissement.

14:15 — HOMMAGE AU FR. ÉDOUARD–HENRI WEBER, OP: Le Fr. É.-H. Wéber a présenté pendant de longues années les publications thomistes lors des journées Saint Thomas. La Société thomiste voudrait rendre hommage au Fr. Wéber qui a également rédigé le “ Bulletin de philosophie médiévale (XIIIe siècle) ” dans la Revue des sciences philosophiques et théologiques. Puisqu’il a toujours aimé la discussion, nous avons choisi de faire intervenir plusieurs personnes qui établiront un dialogue avec lui sur divers sujets de théologie et de philosophie qu’il a abordés dans ses nombreux travaux.

15:45 — PRESENTATION DE QUELQUES LIVRES, par Ruedi IMBACH et Adriano OLIVA.

Cost of the conference: 15 Euros. You can download an MS Word doc or a PDF doc with all this information, and more.

Comment

Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).

The Midwest Seminar in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy: Schedule

Sponsored by the Marquette University Department of Philosophy (website), Marquette University (Milwaukee, WI).

Fall 2005 Schedule:

  • September 16-17, 2005: The Third Midwestern Conference in Medieval Philosophy.
  • November 5, 2005, 2-3:30 pm: Aquinas and the Arabs: A Text Seminar. Richard C. Taylor on Thomas Aquinas: In 4 Sent, d.49, q.2, a.1, Resp. See texts. Location: Alumni Memorial Union 131
  • November 10, 2005, 6 pm: Josep Puig Montada, Universidad Complutense de Madrid: Ethics and Politics in Averroes. Location Alumni Memorial Union 254. Also: Friday, November 11, 2005, 2:00 pm: "Necessity, Possibility and Potency in Averroes." Location: Alumni Memorial Union 227
  • December 3, 2005, 1 pm: Roslyn Weiss, Lehigh University, "A Man for All Reasons: Maimonides’ Account of the Ritual Commandments." Location: Alumni Memorial Union 313

Spring 2006 Schedule:

Forthcoming…

Call for Applications

The Marquette University Mid-West Seminar on Ancient and Medieval Philosophy invites applications for the presentation of a paper in Ancient or Medieval Philosophy at a meeting of the Seminar on Thursday, March 30, 2006. (Due to a very active Spring term in the Marquette Philosophy Department, at present it appears that the seminar will have to be scheduled for March 30. 2006.) For the Winter/Spring term there will be one award. The presenter will be reimbursed up to $500 maximum for travel, room and board expenses only. In most cases this amount will cover all expenses for presenters from North America although applications from elsewhere are welcome. Past participants have come from the US, Canada, England, Israel, Italy and Finland. Deadline: December 1, 2005. Decision by December 20.

The presenter, as well as any visiting scholar, is welcome to make use of Marquette University’s Library which houses one of the finest collections of philosophical materials on Ancient and Medieval thought in the Mid-West. Available electronic resources include: Patrologia Latina; CETEDOC; Thesaurus Linguae Graecae; Past Masters; International Medieval Bibliography; Index Thomisticus; Philosophers’ Index; Index Islamicus; Encyclopaedia of Islam; Encyclopaedia Judaica, and many others (see listing).

Marquette University Faculty Participants:

  • Owen Goldin (Ancient)
  • Susanne Foster (Ancient, Ethics)
  • John Jones (Medieval Social Thought, Neoplatonism)
  • James South (Late Medieval & Renaissance)
  • Andrew Tallon (NeoThomism, phenomenology)
  • Richard C. Taylor (Medieval Latin & Arabic)
  • Roland Teske, S.J., (Medieval, Augustine, Philosophy of Religion)
  • David Twetten (Medieval, Aquinas)

and others from Marquette and other regional universities. Recent visiting participants in the seminar have included:

  • Suzanne Stern-Gillet (Bolton Institute)
  • Alfred Ivry (New York University)
  • Thomas Williams (University of Iowa)
  • Eugene Garver (Saint John’s University)
  • Patricia Curd (Purdue University)
  • Cristina D’Ancona (Università di Padova)
  • John Sisko (College of William and Mary)
  • Jeffrey E. Brower (Purdue University)
  • Mary J. Sirridge (Lousiana State University)
  • Richard Tierney (University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee)
  • Kenneth Seeskin (Northwestern University)
  • Ruth Glassner (Hebrew University, Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem)
  • Steven Harvey (Bar Ilan University)
  • Ray Weiss (University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee)
  • Hye-Kyung Kim (University of Wisconsin at Green Bay)
  • Lorraine Pangle (University of Texas at Austin)

Application Procedure


Send a précis of the proposed presentation with cover letter and cv. Applications from advanced graduate students are welcome but must include a letter of support from the student’s dissertation director.  NOTE: E-mail applications are preferred. Submit applications or requests for information to:

Richard C. Taylor
Department of Philosophy, Marquette University
P.O. Box 1881, Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881 USA.
Email: mistertea@mac.com
Alternate email: Richard.Taylor@Marquette.edu
Telephone: (414)-288-5649. Fax: (414) 288-3010

The Third Annual Midwestern Conference in Medieval Philosophy

The Third Annual Midwestern Conference in Medieval Philosophy will be held on Sept. 16-17 at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (all sessions will be held in the Conference Center in the basement of Raynor Library). Here are the papers to be given:

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 16

8-9 am. Coffee, tea, & bagels in the Commons Room in the Philosophy Department, Coughlin Hall

  • 9:15-10:30 am Yael Raizman-Kedar, Haifa University, "Some 13th Century Philosophers on the Differences Between Lux and Lumen."
  • 10:45-12:00 am John O’Callaghan, University of Notre Dame, "Aquinas’ Aristotelian Image of God"
  • 1:15- 2:30 pm Isabelle Moulin, University of Notre Dame and University of Chicago, "Albert the Great, commentator of Aristotle’s Metaphysics book Lambda"
  • 2:45 - 4:00 pm Michael Rota, University of St Thomas (MN), "Aquinas’s Account of Efficient Causation"
  • 4:15 - 5:30 pm Louis Mancha, Ashland University, "Concurrentism, ‘Little Lords,’ and the ‘Not-One-Act’ Mantra"

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 17

  • 10:15 - 11:30 am Roland Teske, S.J., Marquette University, "Henry of Ghent’s Metaphysical Argument for the Existence of God"
  • 11:45 am - 1:00 pm Josh Blander, UCLA, "Omnipotence and Dependence in Ockham’s Critique of Realism"
  • 2:15 - 3:30 pm Thomas Williams, University of Notre Dame/University of South Florida, and Sandra Visser, Valparaiso University, "Anselm’s Philosophy of Language: The Theory and Some Applications"
  • 3:45 - 5 pm Jeffrey Hause, Creighton University, "Aquinas on Sin and Responsibility"
  • 5:15 - 6:30 pm Francisco Romero, Marquette University, "Aquinas and Cajetan on the Finality of Worship"

Sponsored by the Department of Philosophy and the Midwest Seminar in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy with support from the College of Arts and Sciences.

More information can be found on the web site of Dr Richard C. Taylor, by clicking here.

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Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).