"Aquinas amongst the analytics"
/3:AM Magazine has a lengthy and wide-ranging interview with John Haldane titled “Aquinas amongst the analytics.” Part 1. Part 2.
3:AM Magazine has a lengthy and wide-ranging interview with John Haldane titled “Aquinas amongst the analytics.” Part 1. Part 2.
Fr. A. Oliva, President of the Leonine Commission, requested that we pass on this information:
SOCIÉTÉ THOMISTE
CENTRE D’ÉTUDES DU SAULCHOIR
Journée thomiste
samedi 1 décembre 2012
Thomismes en débat au XXe siècle :
France, Allemagne, Pologne, Angleterre
09 h 30 Accueil
10 h Camille DE BELLOY (Paris)
De la présence dans la connaissance que l’âme a de soi : un conflit d’interprétation thomiste (A. Gardeil et M.-D. Roland-Gosselin)
10 h 30 Vincent H OLZER (Paris)
Les métamorphoses du transcendantal dans le thomisme contemporain de langue allemande : apories et débats
11 h 00 Discussion suivie d’une pause
11 h 45 I. PINARD (Secrétaire de rédaction de la RSPT)
Revue des Sciences philosophiques etet de ses outilsthéologiques site de la du Présentation
12 h 00 G. B ERCEVILLE, M. BORGO, I. COSTA, R. IMBACH, M. MILLAIS, A. OLIVA
Présentation de quelques ouvrages de philosophie et de théologie médiévales I
12 h 30 Pause repas
14 h 00 Roger P IOUIVET (Nancy)
Le thomisme, l’Ecole de Lvov-Varsovie et le Cercle de Cracovie
14 h 30 Cyrille MICHON (Nantes)
Le thomisme analytique
15 h 00 Discussion suivie d’une pause
15 h 45 G. BERCEVILLE, M. BORGO, I. COSTA, R. IMBACH, M. MILLAIS, A. OLIVA
Présentation de quelques ouvrages de philosophie et dethéologie médiévales II
Les séances auront lieu au Saulchoir, Salle « Dumont » du Centre ISTINA,
45, rue de la Glacière Paris XIIIe (Métro 6, station Glacière. Bus 21, arrêt Normann).
Entrée libre.
Nous vous prions de communiquer votre participation au repas (15 €) avant le 21 novembre,
en écrivant à : Adriano Oliva : aoliva@commissio-leonina.org
Critical Reprints, whom we have posted about before, is having a Black Friday sale. They are offering 30% off their hardbound reprints of the Leonine edition of the Summa Theologiae and the Summa Contra Gentiles. This also includes their very popular reprint of the single volume edition of the Contra Gentiles. The sale is on today through Tuesday, Nov. 27.
Go here for more information on the sale.
By the way, I can say that I am very happy with my copy of vol. 14 of the Leonine edition (Prima Pars, qq. 1-49) that I have from them. Tom Osborne has also expressed his satisfaction with the single volume version of the Contra Gentiles from Critical Reprints.
If you don’t have your own copy of these volumes of the Leonine edition and you don’t like reading it off a computer screen, then you should check them out at Critical Reprints.
Very happy to be corrected in substance (chiefly) or in detail.
AVE MARIA UNIVERSITY Department of Theology invites applications for an Assistant Professor of Systematic or Moral Theology, with a preference being given to the latter. The successful candidate will demonstrate both speculative engagement with the truth of the Catholic faith and a knowledge of the philosophical resources Systematic and/or Moral theologians d rew upon in relating the truth of faith to human reason. Ph.D. required at time of appointment. Adherence to the teachings of the Catholic Church and willingness to apply for the Mandatum are required. Applicants should send a curriculum vitae, a description of research plans and pedagogical approach that responds the principles proposed in Ex Corde Ecclesiae, representative publications, and three letters of reference as attachments to GraduateTheology@AveMaria.Edu or mail to Chairman of the Theology Search Committee, Ave Maria University, 5050 Ave Maria Blvd., Ave Maria FL 34142-9550. Review of applications will begin on December 1, 2012 and will continue until the position is filled. Position is subject to final administrative approval. Ave Maria University is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
From 11 until 14 december 2013 the ‘Thomas Instituut Utrecht’ will organize its fourth international conference. Previous conferences were devoted to the themes ‘Divine Transcendence and Immanence in Aquinas, 2005), ‘Aquinas as authority, 2000) and ‘Aquinas on Guilt and Forgiveness, 1995), the proceedings of which are are published by Peeters, Leuven.
The 2013 Conference is entitled: “Faith, Hope and Love. Thomas Aquinas on living by the infused virtues”.
Check out their call for papers here.
Proposals should be send to the director Prof. Henk Schoot (h.j.m.schoot[AT]uvt.nl) before March 1, 2013.
Ohio Dominican University is seeking applications and nominations for the Sr. Ruth Caspar Chair in Philosophy, beginning fall 2013. The successful candidate will be at full professor rank, and a nationally recognized scholar with a proven record of scholarly publications and excellence in teaching. The successful candidate will also demonstrate a willingness and ability to support the university’s Catholic and Dominican mission. The position includes a reduced teaching load, with the expectation of leading colloquia or delivering lectures. Applications from women and underrepresented minority candidates are welcomed. Ohio Dominican is located in Columbus, Ohio, a vibrant metropolitan area with an affordable cost of living. Applications should be submitted to http://www.ohiodominican.edu/jobs/ and should include a letter of interest, a CV, and a list of references. Review of applications will begin December 1.
I was just looking again at my poorly reproduced copy of Weisheipl’s notes on Aristotelian Methodology, and decided to look for a cleaner copy online. There is a redone copy here, with clearer marks and divisions: http://pvspade.com/Logic/docs/Weisheipl.pdf. The formatting is improved so that it is easier to read.
There are a few ways in which it is still helpful to look at the old versions that circulate around. The schematic representations do not seem to be reproduced. For example, in the old version there is a schematic representation of the “principia immediata syllogismi” which is not reproduced in the online version. The online version lacks the Appendices. I wonder if Weisheipl made different versions of this, and would like to know more about what the history is.
Question: Suppose you do a search in St. Thomas’ works for the phrase, “de lege naturae,” on the grounds that you want to see, outside the discussion of ST I-II.94.2, and the Treatise on Law in ST, how St. Thomas decides whether or not a precept, perhaps found in positive law, should be assigned to the law of nature? Then: where are the main places where that sort of discussion is found?
One reason for looking for such texts would be that we would want to examine the actual considerations that St. Thomas uses in deciding whether a precept belongs to the natural law or not. For example, if the NNL theorists were right, then there would be only one way that he could establish this, namely, by identifying a fundamental good, and a precept based upon it, which either simply was the precept in question, or from which the precept in question could be deduced.
Suprisingly, the answer to that question (at least, according to a simple search) seems to be that there are two main places: (i) the discussion of whether the exclusivity and inseparability of matrimony belong to the law of nature in the Sentences Commentary, and (ii) the discussion of sacrifices and vows under the virtue of religion in ST II-II.85, 88.
In neither place does St. Thomas proceed as he should, if the NNL theorists were even vaguely right. But that is not a point I wish to establish here today. Rather, I want to draw attention to this interesting text which I came upon from the Sentences Commentary, on the inseparability of marrige:
Respondeo dicendum, quod matrimonium ex intentione naturae ordinatur ad educationem prolis non solum per aliquod tempus, sed per totam vitam prolis. Unde de lege naturae est quod parentes filiis thesaurizent, et filii parentum heredes sint; et ideo, cum proles sit commune bonum viri et uxoris, oportet eorum societatem perpetuo permanere indivisam secundum legis naturae dictamen; et sic inseparabilitas matrimonii est de lege naturae
I reply that it should be said that matrimony, from the intention of nature, is ordered to the education of the children, not for a certain time only, but rather for the entire life of the children (which is the reason why, by the law of nature, parents are to lay up wealth for their children, and children should inherit from their parents). For that reason, since children are a common good of husband and wife, it is necessary according to the dictum of the law of nature that that association remain perpetually undivided. Thus, the inseparability of matrimony is based on the law of nature.—Super Sent., lib. 4 d. 33 q. 2 a. 1 co.
I thought it interesting that St. Thomas argues that the parents’ education of their children continues throughout the adult life of the children, and his appeal to practices of inheritance in this connection is ingenious. (I am aware that some Catholics wonder why marriage should not be indissoluble only so long as the children are immature.)
Employer Options that are certainly licit are:
1) not complying with the mandate
2) dumping insurance altogether
The debate has been whether compliance under protest can be licit. I think Long and Pakaluk have made the case that it cannot.
But if someone cannot come to certainty one way or another, if the matter seems opinionable, perhaps the following is worth consideration. A totally centralized system of insurance.
Individuals would pay taxes and have access to those benefits determined solely by governing officials. If any of the benefits were in fact evils, financial cooperation by paying taxes would be merely material and would, it seems, be entirely justified.
Of course, the costs would increase, quality of care could well decrease…. In short, all or many of the arguments conservatives love to use against centralization may well be on target. And radical centralization is by NO means a necessary conclusion from Catholic Social Doctrine. On the contrary, both Obamacare as it is and a totally centralized system require to justify themselves before the scrutiny of Catholic Social Teaching on Subsidiarity. Nevertheless, application of the doctrine of subsidiarity proves rather elusive of common agreement.
But with regard to the specific issue of intrinsic evil: Would not such centralization be preferable to the risk of moral compromise - not to mention the risk of grave scandal! - established by the contraceptive mandate… and by the threat of any number of further mandates to come?
We should not confuse political and economic prudence with moral evaluation. It is in service of the latter that I make this suggestion. Suffering hardship is better than committing evil; death, rather than sin.
So, if our minds are swaying back and forth over the issue of the moral object, we should not let the desire for Mammon determine our judgment.
The American conservative criticism of European financial stupidity may well be entirely justified. That is not the point. The point is this: If the individual taxpayer in such a system is freed from any necessarily formal cooperation, then, would not such a clumsy system be preferable to one of possible moral compromise? of certain moral compromise, if Long and Pakaluk are, as I think they are, right?
We have just added Ioannes Benedictus Perazzo to the PRDL: http://www.rester.us/prdl/author_view.php?a_id=4977. Online I can only so far find vol. 1 of his Thomisticus Ecclesiastes, which has interesting essays on various words or topics having to do with moral theology. Vol. 1 begins with Abstinentia and ends with Hypocrisis. We have a hardcopy here at the Center for Thomistic Studies Enjoy!
Under the editorship of Liliana Irizar, the “Dewan Project in Spanish” has borne fruit in the form of two distinct books.
The latter carries an Introduction that I wrote, mirroring its predecessor, for which Fr Stephen L. Brock wrote the Introduction.
¡Get your Spanish on! Big things are happening in South American Thomism.
Under the direction of the Sacra Doctrina Project