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On the Virtues

Digital Verbum Edition

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Overview

In light of current interest in the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas, rediscovery of the work of John Capreolus (1380-1444) is particularly important. Known to the Renaissance theologians who succeeded him as "prince of Thomists," he established a mode of Thomistic theological and philosophical engagement that has set the pattern for Thomistic thinkers after him. Twentieth-century scholarship on Capreolus tended to focus on questions concerning metaphysics, the person, and the beatific vision. The purpose of the present translation of his questions on the virtues is to bring to the fore another aspect of his thought, his theological ethics.

Capreolus's great work, his Arguments in Defense of the Theology of St. Thomas, constitutes a significant juncture in the history of Western theology. In one respect it is an exercise in the traditional genre of question-commentaries on Peter Lombard's Book of Sentences, a twelfth-century work that had been the official textbook of theology at the University of Paris. In Capreolus's hands, however, the format of the traditional Sentences commentary itself becomes a pretext for accomplishing a purpose more original than that of any preceding commentator on Lombard's work, namely to defend the thought of Aquinas against his late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century adversaries, including John Duns Scotus, Durandus of St. Pourçain, and Peter Aureole.

The selection from Capreolus's work represented in this translation shows him defending Aquinas's conclusions on faith, hope, charity, the gifts of the Holy Spirit, and the virtues against such adversaries. With a spirit of generosity in quotation, Capreolus lets each adversary have his say, but the outcome of the disputes is never in question, as Capreolus on each point leads the reader towards a view of the superiority of the Thomistic position.

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  • Offers an English translation of John Capreolus texts
  • Leads the reader towards a view of the superiority of the Thomistic position
  • Reflects on Aquinas's conclusions on faith, hope, charity, the gifts of the Holy Spirit, and the virtues against such adversaries
  • Whether Habitual Virtues Are Necessary to Man
  • Wheter Faith Is a Virtue Infused by God
  • Whether Faith Is of Things Seen
  • Whether Hope Is a Theological Virtue Really Distinct from Faith and Charity
  • Whether a Man Ought, out of Charity, to Love God More Than Himself
  • Whether Faith Remains in Heaven
  • Whether by Human Acts Habits of Virtue Are Acquired Which Exist in the Sensitive Appetite, That Is, in the Concupiscible or Irascible Powers, as in Their Subject
  • Whether the Gifts of the Holy Spirit Are Habits Distinct from the Virtues
  • Whether the Cardinal Virtues Are Interconnected in Such a Way That He Who Possesses One Possesses All
This translation is likely to be of value not only to those interested in the history of Thomism, Thomistic moral theory, and medieval texts on ethics, but also to those intrigued by current debates about freedom and obligation in virtue ethics.

Joseph Koterski, S.J., International Philosophical Quarterly

[This book] will be welcomed by all who are interested in the current renewal of virtue-based morality. The translators have succeeded admirably in putting Capreolus's text into accurate and readable English.

Michael J. Dodds, O.P., Theological Studies

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    $27.99

    Digital list price: $34.95
    Save $6.96 (19%)