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"St. Albert the Great began teaching at the University of Paris in 1243 - just two years after the Parisian Condemnation of 1241, which affirmed that created and finite intellects will see the divine essence directly in their beatific visions. This book translates and examines key texts in which St. Albert explains how it is possible for such intellects to know the infinite divine essence in patria.
With careful attention given to the philosophical and theological traditions that converged in thirteenth-century Paris, St. Albert the Great's Theory of the Beatific Vision reveals the foundation of St. Albert's thought, demonstrating that beneath his Aristotelian terminology lies a Neo-Platonic epistemology and metaphysics wherein reality is identified with light. Providing detailed context for St. Albert's thought, this book also contrasts his views with those of his student, St. Thomas Aquinas, and their contemporary, St. Bonaventure.
The result is a valuable resource for anyone exploring the unique commingling of philosophy and theology that reached its golden age in the scholastics of the thirteenth century."--BOOK JACKET.
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Subjects
Medieval philosophy, theology, beatific vision, epistemology, metaphysics, neo-platonism, scholasticism, Albertus magnus, saint, bishop of ratisbone, 1193-1280, Beatific vision, History of doctrines, Doctrine of the beatific visionPeople
Albert the Great, Aquinas, BonaventureTimes
13th centuryEdition | Availability |
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1
St. Albert the Great's Theory of the Beatific Vision
September 2002, Peter Lang Publishing
Hardcover
in English
0820457906 9780820457901
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2
St. Albert the Great's Theory of the Beatific Vision
Publisher unknown
in English
0820457906 9780820457901
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Work Description
My book explores theories of the beatific vision, centering on Albert's thought. But in doing so, it examines the views of his student, Aquinas, Bonaventure, and others. In 1241 the Catholic church issued a set of condemnations, proclaiming certain theories or interpretations of doctrine heretical. Among these heretical views was the proposition that no created intellect can see the divine essence (God) directly. Around the beginning of the 13th century theologians began to consider in depth the infinite nature of the divine essence. Confronted with this realization, they had a great deal of trouble reconciling how a limited, created intellect could ever directly know an infinite God. As a result, they denied that finite intellects can ever know God directly. So the problem I explore depends upon the historical, epistemological, metaphysical and theological issues with which Albert and his peers struggled. My book explores all of these issues, and so, although the theory of the beatific vision is its focal point, it is far more than a simple discussion of one issue. It explores and contrasts the epistemologies and metaphysics of the three theologians mentioned above. It traces the biblical origins and the theological tradition concerning the beatific vision. It provides translations of previously untranslated passages of Albert's work, and new translations of several key texts from Aquinas and Bonaventure. It is structured around "Key Texts," important passages crucial to understanding the issues involved. And it examines the scholastic method in depth at the outset. Any serious student of medieval thought would benefit greatly from reading this work carefully.
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