• Ordering Differences: Aquinas vs. the Moderns
    Aquinas Center of Theology, Occasional Papers on the Catholic Intellectual Life, 4 5-24. 2001.
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    Individuation and the Body in Aquinas
    Miscellanea Mediaevalia 24 178-196. 1996.
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    Thomas Aquinas’ Double Metaphysics of Simplicity and Infinity
    International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (3): 297-317. 1993.
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    The paper examines the different uses of and responses to Aristotle’s account of science in the first wave of interpretation of Aristotle’s theory of science and works in natural science and metaphysics in the early 13th century in Roger Bacon and Albert the Great. The author argues that Bacon reduces all the disciplines to mathematics as the most scientific discipline, even as he argues that experimentum is at the center of scientific evidence and conclusions. Albert the Great, by contrast, giv…Read more
  • Anselm and the Phenomenology of the Gift in Marcel, Sartre and Marion
    In Giles E. M. Gaspar Ian Logan (ed.), Saint Anselm of Canterbury and His Legacy, University of Toronto Press. pp. 385-404. 2012.
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    Abelard in Four Dimensions: A Twelfth-Century Philosopher in His Context and Ours by John Marenbon (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (3): 547-548. 2015.
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    Anselm of Canterbury and the Desire for the Word
    The Catholic University of America Press. 2012.
    Eileen C. Sweeney. gap between what faith believes and what reason understands, is also expressed in the attempt to think “that than which none greater can be thought.” For to think it is to reach God via a single, long extension of the mind ...
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    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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    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THREE NOTIONS OF RESOLUTIO AND THE STRUCTURE OF REASONING IN AQUINAS 1 EILEEN c. SWEENEY Boston College Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts RESOLUTIO, better known by the English transliteration of its Greek counterpart, "analysis," has been touted as " the conceptual model for some of the most important ideas in the history of philosophy, including the history of the methodology and philosophy of science." 2 But while resolution /analysis …Read more
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    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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    The Moral Gap (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 17 (2): 260-267. 2000.
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    Aquinas on Vice and Sin
    In Stephen J. Pope (ed.), The Ethics of Aquinas, Georgetown University Press. 2002.
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    Abelard and the Jews
    In Babette S. Hellemans & E. J. Brill (eds.), Rethinking Abelard: A Collection of Critical Essays, Brill Academic. pp. 37-50. 2014.
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    Seeing Double
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 83 (3): 389-420. 2009.
    This essay focuses on three interpretations of Aquinas influenced by Continental philosophy, those of John Caputo, Jean-Luc Marion, and John Milbank/Catherine Pickstock. The essay considers the well-worn question, whether Aquinas is an onto-theologian in Heidegger’s sense, but looks more broadly at the point of contact common to these interpretations: Aquinas’s relationship to modernity.As Continental thought has put into question the nature of philosophy through a critical look at modern philos…Read more
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    Anselm on Human Finitude: A Dialogue with Existentialism
    Saint 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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    Literary forms of medieval philosophy
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.