Doubting Thomas

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PRESSISBN: 9780268211103

Early Franciscan Disputes with Aquinas

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Sale price$127.00


By Brendan W. Case
Imprint: UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
216

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Description

Brendan W. Case is the associate director for research of the Human Flourishing Program at Harvard University, and the author of The Justification of the Sinless: On Supralapsarian Christology and the Goodness of the Incarnation and The Accountable Animal: Justice, Justification, and Judgment.

Acknowledgements Introduction: Friendly Rivals in a Time of Ferment 1. Intuiting God: Divine Illumination and the Ontological Argument 2. The Father's 'Auctoritas': The Priority of Act to Relation in the Trinitarian Processions 3. Measuring Creation: Bonaventure and Aquinas on the Finitude of Time 4. Spiritual Matter I: Bonaventure and Aquinas on Angelic Mutability 5. Spiritual Matter II: Olivi and Aquinas on the "Real Distinction" Epilogue: Sanctity and Theology: Aquinas's Critique of Bonaventure Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

"This book is masterfully written, and it is a must-read for anyone interested in Christian dogmatics. Case offers a highly worthwhile retrieval of Bonaventure and his early followers, constructively criticizing various positions taken by Aquinas." - Matthew Levering, author of Aquinas's Eschatological Ethics and the Virtue of Temperance "Doubting Thomas brings to light the philosophical arguments between Bonaventure and Aquinas across a range of issues. This well-written and well-informed book expertly illuminates what was at stake in their disagreements. You will not see the thirteenth century the same way after reading this book." - Christopher Cullen, author of Bonaventure: Great Medieval Thinkers "It is with good reason that St. Thomas Aquinas has been named the Common Doctor of the Church. However, as Brendan Case argues in his insightful and provocative book, it is for equally good reasons that St. Thomas has not been named the only doctor of the Catholic Church. Theologians of all stripes will benefit, therefore, from Case's engaging and detailed display of the numerous theological gifts on offer from St. Bonaventure, Blessed John Duns Scotus, and the wider Franciscan tradition." - T. Adam Van Wart, author of Neither Nature nor Grace

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