S.M.A.R.T.

The SMART meetings at the ACPA have been scheduled:

SOCIETY FOR MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE THOMISM (S.M.A.R.T.)

2014 Annual ACPA Meeting

Hyatt Regency Washington on Capitol Hill

400 New Jersey Ave. NW

 Washington, DC 20001

 

Friday Morning, 10 October 2014: 10am to 12 noon

 

Society for Medieval and Renaissance Thomism I                                                   Congressional C 

Organizer & Chair: Thomas M. Osborne, Center for Thomistic Studies, University of St. Thomas (TX)

Speaker:          Br. Raymund Snyder, O.P., Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception  (Washington, DC)

                        “Article or Preamble? A Reconsideration of Cardinal Cajetan's Later Comments on the

                        Rational Demonstrability of the Immortal Soul”

Speaker:          Charles Douglas Robertson, Center for Thomistic Studies, University of St. Thomas (TX)

                        "John Capreolus on the Formal Object of Metaphysics"

 

 Sunday Morning, 12 October 2014 9am to 11am

Society for Medieval and Renaissance Thomism II                                             Olympic

Chair:              R. J. Matava, Christendom College.

Speaker:          Br. Innocent Smith, OP, Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception (Washington, DC)

                        “Doctrinal Preaching and the Summa Theologiae”

Speaker:          Domenic D'Ettore, Marian University

                        “Not a little confusing?: Sylvester of Ferrara’s Hybrid doctrine of Analogy.”

 

ACPA Meeting "Dispositions, Habits, and Virtues" (October 10-12, 2014)

The preliminary conference schedule is now online for the 2014 annual meeting of the American Catholic Philosophical Association. The conference will meet in Washington, D.C., hosted by The Catholic University of America, with the theme “Dispositions, Habits, and Virtues”. Registration information is here. Plenary speakers are Susan Haack, Timothy B. Noone, Daniel Dahlstrom, Marilyn McCord Adams, and the Aquinas Medalist is John Rist. For the second year, the conference has expanded its offerings, and there many satellite sessions on a variety of topics.

Dominican Colloquium in Berkeley Concludes

A colloquium sponsored by the Dominican School of Philosophy & Theology in Berkeley, on the intersection between philosophy and theology has just concluded.  Each main presenter was paired with a respondent in theology. Main talks by Msgr. Robert Sokolowski, Linda Zagzebski, Edward Feser, Fr. Michael Dodds, John Searle, Fr. Michał Paluch, Allred Freddoso, and John O’Callaghan received responses from Fr. Richard Schenk, Fr. Bernhard Blankenhorn, Fr. Simon Gaine, Steven Long, Fr. Michael Dodds, Matthew Levering, Fr. Thomas Joseph White, and Fr. Michael Sherwin, respectively. Over fifty breakout-session papers were also delivered. The main papers and responses, and a selection from the breakout papers, are to appear later in Nova et Vetera. The organizers consider this colloquium to be the first of an ongoing series, to be held every three years.

University of Dallas's Aquinas lectures now in print

In from Philipp Rosemann at the University of Dallas is the following news:

Are you aware of the fact that the University of Dallas now publishes its annual Aquinas Lecture, in a series of small books produced by St. Augustine's Press? For more info, have a look here.

The first lecture published is that of a scholar well-known to our visitors: John F. Boyle, who lectured on "Master Thomas Aquinas and the Fullness of Life." The books are published by St. Augustine's Press.

English translation of Bonaventure's Scriptum on Book 1 of the Sentences

In from Alexis Bugnolo is news that an English translation of Bonaventure's Scriptum on Book 1 of Peter Lombard's Sentences will appear in November of this year. The translation uses the critical edition from Quaracchi, and includes all the scholia and notes! Neat.

To find out more about the translation you can follow this link.

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).

Ramirez's article on the authority of St. Thomas available online

There is a nice scan of Santiago Ramirez, O.P.'s article "The Authority of St. Thomas Aquinas" available at the Internet Archive (here). Ramirez's piece appeared in the January issue of The Thomist in 1952. Another scan of it had been online for a while (I can't remember where now) but the one at the Internet Archive is far superior. I don't know how long it has been up there but, judging by the number of downloads (only 11 as of today), I would guess that it has not been up for very long.

What has Athens to do with Jerusalem? Berkeley colloquium July 16-20

Back in February Fr. Bryan Kromholtz, OP posted here at Thomistica on the colloquium that the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology in Berkeley, California will be hosting this July. (Fr. Bryan teaches theology at the DSPT). The colloquium is entitled "What has Athens to do with Jerusalem? Dialogue between Philosophy and Theology in the 21st Century" and will be held July  16-20. Since Fr. Bryan posted about it several months ago I thought it would be a good idea to remind our readers about it.

You can find further information and register for the colloquium here at the DSPT website. Fr. Bartholomew de la Torre, OP informs me that there are new items up on the colloquium page. So, you might want to check it out. From a quick glance, one new thing I noticed on the page are some short videos featuring a few of the friars and a student of the DSPT talking about the relationship between philosophy and theology. I also see that the abstracts for the papers are now up.