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7Thomas Aquinas on The Natural Law Written on Our HeartsIn Jonathan A. Jacobs (ed.), Reason, Religion, and Natural Law: From Plato to Spinoza, Oxford University Press. pp. 133-154. 2012.This chapter shows the origins of diverse views of natural law in Aquinas as modern or anti-modern, secular or Christian in tensions present within Aquinas. Four areas of tension are traced: nature as informed by the biblical story of fall and redemption vs. nature as essence, the origin of natural law principles in nature (especially non-rational nature) vs. reason, the theological context of the “treatise on law” within the _Summa theologiae_ vs. the largely non-theologically based reasoning w…Read more
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12Individuation and the Body in AquinasIn Jan A. Aertsen & Andreas Speer (eds.), Individuum und Individualität im Mittelalter, De Gruyter. pp. 178-196. 1995.
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97Anselm as TeacherAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 98 (2): 179-194. 2024.The essay examines Anselm’s De libertate arbitrii and De casu diaboli, arguing that the points made about the will and free choice are mirrored in the questions and struggles of the student interlocutor in the dialogues. In contrast to Plato and Aristotle, who want to bring us to see that virtue is the path to happiness, Anselm wants to show that we have free choice and are responsible for not choosing rightly (i.e., choosing justice for its own sake), and that human beings are autonomous but al…Read more
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1Late scholastics and renaissance humanists on the passions in moral actionIn Stephan Schmid (ed.), Philosophy of Mind in the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance, Routledge. 2018.
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41New Readings of Anselm of Canterbury's Intellectual Methods (edited book)BRILL. 2022.New readings of Anselm’s speculative and spiritual writings brought in light of questions and thinkers from Augustine to today.
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53What Is a Person? Realities, Constructs, Illusions by John M. RistJournal of the History of Philosophy 59 (2): 345-346. 2021.John Rist's What Is a Person? is a scholarly, rich, and trenchant study of the history of the concept of personhood in Western thought. However, its sharp critique of modern and postmodern accounts of personhood, though thought-provoking, also uses jarringly polemical language, which further undermines the book's flawed overall argument. The first section, "Constructing the Mainline Tradition," carefully mines ancient and medieval sources, tracing with nuance and complexity the different threads…Read more
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37When Is It Wrong? Models of Argument and Interpretation from the 12th to the 13th CenturyIn Andreas Speer & Maxime Mauriège (eds.), Irrtum – Error – Erreur, De Gruyter. pp. 19-38. 2018.
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95The Soul–Body Problem at Paris, ca. 1200–1250: Hugh of St-Cher and His Contemporaries (review)Speculum 88 (1): 255-257. 2013.
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Aquinas' Notion of Science: Its Twelfth-Century Roots and Aristotelian TransformationDissertation, The University of Texas at Austin. 1986.In the period between the mid-12th and mid-13th centuries, the notion of 'science' replaced that of 'art' as the category against which all areas of academic inquiry including theology were measured. This dissertation selectively traces one aspect of this change as it is understood by Thomas Aquinas: the understanding of the relationship of sacred and secular study given these two different models of learning, art and science. ;Hugh of St. Victor's Didascalicon is discussed as it represents the …Read more
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11Aquinas' Notion of Science: Its 12th Century Roots and Aristotelian TransformationUniversity Microfilms International. 1986.
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80Logic, Theology and Poetry in Boethius, Abelard and Alan of LillePalgrave/MacMillan. 2006.This interdisciplinary study offers an interpretation of the major logical, philosophical/theological and poetic writings of Boethius, Abelard and Alan of Lille. The author examines their theories of language and the ways in which they explore how words illuminate things, how the mind comprehends God and how the individual reaches beatitude.
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3Aquinas on Vice and SinIn Stephen J. Pope (ed.), The Ethics of Aquinas, Georgetown University Press. 2002.
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54Rewriting the Narrative of Scripture: 12th-Century Debates over Reason and Theological FormJournal of Nietzsche Studies 3 1-34. 1993.While the history of Western philosophy as a whole can be seen as the appropriation by philosophers of the discourse of truth from the poets and makers of myth, of the replacement of the narrative form by the 'properly philosophical' form of argument, it is an appropriation that also takes place within medieval thought, particularly in the construction of theology as a legitimate academic discipline. Whether that appropriation constitutes progress or loss was as much debated in the Middle Ages a…Read more
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46Abelard and the JewsIn Babette S. Hellemans & E. J. Brill (eds.), Rethinking Abelard: A Collection of Critical Essays, Brill Academic. pp. 37-50. 2014.
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236From Determined Motion to Undetermined Will and Nature to Supernature in AquinasPhilosophical Topics 20 (2): 189-214. 1992.This essay will focus on analogies drawn from Aristotle’s account of natural motion and change which Thomas Aquinas uses to construct responses and explanations of free choice and its characteristic act, i.e. creation for God, and acts of virtue for human beings. Though these analogies to natural change recur throughout the Thomistic corpus, my analysis will focus on their use in the Summa Theologiae, where they consistently bear the weight of Aquinas’s account of the divine and human will and t…Read more
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Thomas Aquinas and the Difficulties of Reading the Natural Law Written on Our HeartsIn Jonathan A. Jacobs (ed.), Reason, Religion, and Natural Law: From Plato to Spinoza, Oxford University Press. 2012.
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McGrade, Stephen, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Philosophy, Cambridge University Press, 2003, in Philosophical Books, 46 (Apr 2005): 141-2. (review)Philosophical Books 46 (2): 141-142. 2005.
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Anselm und der Dialog. Distanz und VersoehnungIn Gunter Narr Verlag (ed.), Gespraeche lesen. Philosophische Dialoge im Mittelalter, . pp. 101-124. 1999.
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43Anselm on Human Finitude: A Dialogue with ExistentialismSaint Anselm Journal 10 (1). 2014.The paper discusses Anselm's account of human finitude and freedom through his discussion of what it means to receive what we have from God in De casu diaboli. The essay argues that Anselm is considering the same issue as Jean Paul Sartre in his account of receiving a gift as incompatible with freedom. De casu diaboli takes up this same question, asking about how the finite will can be free, which requires that it have something per se, when there is nothing, as St. Paul asserted in Romans, that…Read more
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91Reasoning about Nature in Virtue, Action and Law: The Path from Principles to PracticeDiametros 38 175-190. 2013.This paper argues that the role of nature in Aquinas’s account of virtue, action and law does not require the kind of adherence to Aristotle’s ‘metaphysical biology’ that is refuted by Darwin because of the way Aquinas transforms nature as applied to a rational being and as an analogy to elucidate virtue, habit and law. Aquinas’s grounding of ethics and law in the notion of nature is also not a kind of intuitionism designed to answer all moral questions and stop all ethical debates but a model w…Read more
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The Problem of Philosophy and Theology in Anselm of CanterburyIn Kent Emery & Russell Freidman (eds.), Medieval Philosophy and Theology in the Long Middle Ages. A Tribute to Stephen F. Brown, Studien Und Texte Zur Geistesgeschichte Des Mittelalters. pp. 487-514. 2011.
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19Relihan, Joel C. The Prisoner’s Philosophy: Life and Death in Boethius’s Consolation, University of Notre Dame Press, 2007, in Religious Studies Review 36 (3) (2010): 234.Religious Studies Review 36 (3): 234. 2010.
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1Metaphysics and its Distinction from Sacred Doctrine in AquinasIn Reijo Työrinoja, Anja Inkeri Lehtinen & Dagfinn Føllesdal (eds.), Knowledge and Medieval Philosophy, Annals of the Finnish Society For Missiology and Ecumenics. pp. 162-170. 1990.
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89Abelard’s Progress: From Logic to Ethics. Review of John Marenbon, The Philosophy of Peter Abelard (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 40 (3): 367-376. 2000.
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36Rewriting the Narrative of Scripture: 12th-Century Debates over Reason and Theological FormMedieval Philosophy & Theology 3 1-34. 1993.
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Anselm in Dialogue with the OtherPlurality of Philosophies in the Middle Ages, Proceedings of the XIIth International Congress, Palermo, 16 – 22 September 2007 (1): 159-168. 2012.
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137Aquinas & Sartre: On freedom, personal identity, and the possibility of happiness (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (1): 130-131. 2011.This well-written volume consists of paired chapters on human being, understanding, freedom, and happiness on Aquinas and Sartre. Stephen Wang's project is to use Sartre to reveal the more "radical" aspects of Aquinas's thought and to use Aquinas to "unlock the meaning" of Sartre's more radical claims . There is a great deal that is fresh and illuminating in this rapprochement between two thinkers most would not join together. Because the aim is to bring the thinkers into conversation, Wang avoi…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |