Thomas Aquinas on Bodily Identity - Antonia Fitzpatrick

Thomas Aquinas on Bodily Identity

Buch | Hardcover
214 Seiten
2017
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-879085-3 (ISBN)
113,45 inkl. MwSt
Thomas Aquinas asked the essential philosophical question which continues to resound to the modern day: what constitutes a human being? This volume looks at Aquinas's views on bodily and spiritual identity through a lens of theological concerns, pagan and Arabic authoritative sources, and contemporary polemic with dualist heresy.
This is a study of the union of matter and the soul in the human being in the thought of the Dominican Thomas Aquinas. At first glance this issue might appear arcane, but it was at the centre of polemic with heresy in the thirteenth century and at the centre of the development of medieval thought more broadly. The book argues that theological issues, especially the need for an identical body to be resurrected at the end of time, but also considerations about Christ's crucifixion and saints' relics, were central to Aquinas's account of how human beings are constituted. The book explores in particular how theological questions and concerns shaped Aquinas's thought on individuality and personal and bodily identity over time, his embryology and understanding of heredity, his work on nutrition and bodily growth, and his fundamental conception of matter itself. It demonstrates, up-close, how Aquinas used his peripatetic sources, Aristotle and (especially) Averroes, to frame and further his own thinking in these areas. The book also indicates how Aquinas's thought on bodily identity became pivotal to university debates and relations between the rival mendicant orders in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, and that quarrels surrounding these issues persisted into the fifteenth century.

Not only is this a study of the interface between theology, biology, and physics in Aquinas's mind; it also fundamentally revises the view of Aquinas that is generally accepted. Aquinas is famous for holding that the one and only substantial (or nature-determining) form in a human being is the soul, and most scholars have therefore thought that he located the identity of the individual in their soul. This book restores the body through a thorough and critical examination of the range of Aquinas's works.

Antonia Fitzpatrick is Departmental Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Oxford's History Faculty and St. John's College. Prior to this, she was a Junior Research Fellow at St. John's, a doctoral and masters student at University College London, and an undergraduate at Wadham College, Oxford. Thomas Aquinas on Bodily Identity is her first book. She is researching a second monograph on Dominican and Franciscan intellectual traditions in the Late Middle Ages, and separately examining notions of harmony in medieval thought. Antonia is trained in Philosophy as well as History, and in addition to articles on Franciscan and Dominican debates about individuality and bodily identity, she has published on the relationship between modern historical modes of argumentation and formal logic.

Introduction
1: Aristotelian Tradition (I): Individuality and the Individual Body
2: Aristotelian Tradition (II): Bodily Identity
3: Thomas Aquinas (I): Individuality and the Individual Body
4: Thomas Aquinas (II): Bodily Identity
Conclusion
Epilogue: The Later Battles
Bibliography

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 164 x 242 mm
Gewicht 502 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Religionsgeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Philosophie des Mittelalters
ISBN-10 0-19-879085-6 / 0198790856
ISBN-13 978-0-19-879085-3 / 9780198790853
Zustand Neuware
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