•  241
    A Dominican missionary in the nineteenth century whom Leo XIII later named a Cardinal, Zeferino González started his philosophical reflections in the Far East at the University of Santo Tomas, Manila, Philippines. The result was his first major work, the "Estudios sobre la filosofia de Sto. Tomas" (1864). Upon his return to Spain, González published an essay titled “La Filosofia de la Historia.” Arguably, this essay signals the importance of history in understanding González ’s attempts to conti…Read more
  • Zeferino González: Inheritor of Salamantine Thomism in the Nineteenth Century
    with Felix de los Reyes
    In Enrique Martínez & Lucas Prieto (eds.), Tomismo hispano: Ocho siglos de tradición intelectual, Dykinson/sindéresis. pp. 249-256. 2024.
    The paper presents Cardinal Zeferino González as an inheritor of Salamantine Thomism, having been a product of the Dominican convent in Ocaña, Spain (1844–1848) and the University of Santo Tomas, Manila (1849–1853). It should be noted that Santo Tomas in Manila was founded in 1611 by Spanish Dominican missionaries, specifically by Bishop Miguel de Benavides who succeeded the first bishop of Manila, the Dominican friar Domingo de Salazar. From that time in the 17th century until González’s stints…Read more
  •  447
    This paper discusses Zeferino González’s commentary on whether Thomistic teachings support insurgence. In particular, the study revisits one chapter of the Estudios sobre la filosofía de Santo Tomás (1864). Here, González critiques a court official of Castille, Francisco Gutiérrez de la Huerta, who, in his Dictamen del Fiscal (1845), attributes the doctrine of regicide and tyrannicide to St. Thomas Aquinas. Suspecting this ascription to Aquinas and the Dominicans as “bad faith,” González goes ba…Read more
  •  501
    This paper explores the intricate process of knowledge acquisition and pedagogy through the philosophical lens of St. Thomas Aquinas, focusing on the interaction between reason and learning. By analyzing Aquinas' epistemological framework, particularly his ideas on ideogenesis and abstraction, the study highlights the complex relationship between the sensory and intellectual processes involved in education. The dual roles of teacher and student are examined, emphasizing the teacher's role in gui…Read more
  •  51
    The article addresses the contemporary issue of fake news, which is taken in the context of the decline of press in the twenty-first century. It exposes the need to rehabilitate the fourth estate so that journalism will not become obsolete. Used in the critique are positions made by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as regards fake news, and the concepts of nominalism, fact and critical realism of Jacques Maritain, a twentieth-century philosopher.
  •  762
    Aesthetic Experience and Realism
    Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 11 81-92. 2015.
    The choice of this topic is a curious one, perhaps, for art seems to be such a personal creation that even its appreciation may be relative and most of the time considered as subjective or reliant on impressions. Whether this idea is rightfully founded or not is reviewed in this paper: Is art’s meaning simply an impression? Does it come to exist merely because of whims and ecstasies? Is the experience of art such that it cannot but be dominated by personal ideas? In answering these questions, I …Read more
  •  2065
    This article reintroduces Fr. Zeferino González, OP (1831-1894) to scholars of Church history, philosophy, and cultural heritage. He was an alumnus of the University of Santo Tomás in Manila, a Cardinal, and a champion of the revival of Catholic Philosophy that led to the promulgation of Leo XIII’s encyclical Aeterni Patris. Specifically, this essay presents, firstly, the Cardinal’s biography in the context of his experience as a missionary in the Far East; secondly, the intellectual tradition i…Read more