Aquinas
Aquinas
Aquinas
WAGAN
St. Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274) Aquinas came from a noble family from Naples. He joined the Dominican order against his familys wishes Aquinas studied with Albert the Great in Paris and participated in the Aristotelian revival of the Middle Ages. He was canonized and became a saint in 1323.
Resisting the temptation of a prostitute and the discovery of Herring at night were the miracles used to justify his sainthood.
Aquinass extensive corpus of scholarship is perhaps a greater miracle than those mentioned above.
Ultimate Reality
Aquinas was primarily a Christian theologian. He viewed human wisdom as structured like a pyramid with the sciences of ethics and politics at its base with philosophy above and theology at its apex. Natural philosophy are not contradictory but complementary. Faith and reason are valid in their own realms. Aquinas scholastic method integrates Aristotles teleological view of nature into the biblical theology of creation and Christian salvation.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government
Aquinas states: Thus the goodness which in God is simple and unique is found in countless and differentiated creatures. Consequently it is the entire universe which shares perfectly the goodness of God and represents it more than one creature by itself.
Human beings are partners with God and politics is necessary even if there was no fall from the Garden of Eden.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Nonhuman animals have specific natural defenses (such as claws), whereas humans must rely on reason for their survival. Human co-creation requires human cooperation and cannot be done by single individuals with their limited talents. The power of speech show that solitary existence is inappropriate (nature does nothing in vain); speech and language provide the mans for interpersonal projects.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Aquinas argues humans must achieve the humanization of the world and eternal salvation and this entails a principle of government within society.
If it is natural for human beings to live in society, then it follows that there must be regulation of society. For not human group can long endure if each person sought only his individual ends. One of them would have to provide for the common interest, just as an organism would break apart unless it had some controlling power in it which worked for the good of all bodily parts.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Humans require political rule for social survival. Humans should be put under the rule of those providing for the common interest or common good. The king or government exists to prevent chaos. Original sin leaves humans wounded, fallible, and frail though not vitiated or corrupted. Political institutions foster knowledge, culture, and virtue and permit humans to pursue their ultimate end, which is the enjoyment of God.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Ordering of the social whole implies a directing authority. Those who are superior by intellect are by nature rulers. Others can carry out task under a supervisor and others can only follow. This division of talents makes an ordering function necessary but the ultimate end is beyond the political rulers natural capacities. Aquinas views the church as caring for souls but believes the church and state are ultimately complementary. Spiritual goods are preeminent, but can only be realized if the secular goods of peace, order, justice, protection of the family, and the freedom to practice the Catholic faith are secured.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
The best rulers follow both natural reason but also the divine law of love and mercy.
A magnanimous (pr great-souled individual) must be willing to do great things on behalf of mutually dependent people as well as the glorification of God.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
The ruler should be aware of three ways he or she can become irrational:
A person can desire more than his or her fair share of honor. A person can neglect God in his quest for honor. A person can seek honor without concern for others.
A magnanimous person must harmonize faith and reason so that such a person would merit honor and glory.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Rulers should not be despotic or arrogant but should be prudent. Aquinas distinguishes between cleverness (astutia) and moral prudence (prudentia). Thomas Gilby characterizes moral prudence as:
a good habit or settled quality, of the practical reason giving an active bent toward right doing as an individual act; it ranges from our pondering over what should be done through our judgment of what we should choose to do, and is completed in that being an effective command.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Assiduously investigate alternative courses of conduct together with the means for accomplishing a moral end. Know how to make practical judgments about possible courses of action. Possess a good memory to draw from the storehouse of past experience. Possess circumspection, which involves close attention to the attendant circumstances of a political decision. Consult those with a strong reputation for practical wisdom and service in the public interest. Possess foresight to reasonably project into the future the consequences of a given line of action.
Human Nature and the Common Good and the Necessity of Government - Continued
Tyranny should be avoided by the appropriate selection of kings and construction of institutions. A ruler must temper his bodily or sexual powers with his or her rational faculties. The good ruler rarely overpowers his subjects but channels their activities for the common good.
On Kingship
This is also evident from experience. For provinces or cities which are not ruled by one person are torn with dissentions and tossed about without peace, so that the complaint seems to be fulfilled which the Lord uttered through the Prophet: Many pastors have destroyed my vineyard. On the other hand, provinces and cities which are ruled under one king enjoy peace, flourish in justice, and delight in prosperity. Hence, the Lord by His prophets promises to His people as a great reward that He will give them one head that one Prince will be in the midst of the them.
Types of Laws
Political rulership must be carried out under law and the ruler should keep the laws he makes for others. Aquinas describes the essence of law:
Law is a rule and measure of acts whereby man is induced to act or is restrained from acting: for lex (law) is derived from ligare (to bind), because it binds one to act. Now the rule and measure of human acts, as is evident from what has been stated above, since it belongs to the reason to direct the end, which is the first principle in all matters of action according to the Philosopher (Aristotle).
True law is reasonable. Eternal Law Divine reason and wisdom comprise an eternal law a law governing the whole creation, a law not made but eternally existing and therefore unknowable to humans entirely, yet the source of all true law on earth. Natural Law The practical reflection or sharing in eternal reason that provides humans with objective, changeless, universal rules or general principles of action for ethical and political life. Human Law True law that is derived from natural law. A rule of state that is at odds with natural law is no law at all. Divine Law The revealed truths such as the ten commandments and the Sermon on the Mounts that supplement and corrects human fallibility and frailty.
Natural law should be discovered by the rulers reason and applied. Synderesis is the natural capability of practical reason to discern the natural law and thereby, do good and avoid evil. A ruler needs broad experience and understanding of the political, economic and social context of his or her society to establish just punishments.
Human well-being is such that humans tend toward selfpreservation. Our tendencies to protect ourselves require the protections of national security or housing, which are general precepts of natural law. Humans are inclined to propagate the species, so family life must be protected. Humans as rational beings naturally desire or tend to obtain knowledge. Here the natural law general precept is that humans should seek education. Humans are naturally inclined to be socially or communally dependent. We should live in societies based on the division of labor as a general precept of natural law. Caring for and protecting children forms the natural law general precept of monogamy.
Human law is just and reasonable only if it meets these five criteria:
It must be promulgated (or ordained) by a legitimate ruler for the common good lawmaking must be transparent. It must not exceed the authorized power of the lawgiver in a particular society. It must lay only reasonable burdens on subjects according to the equality of proportion (such as a graduated income tax based on the ability to pay). It must be consistent with the principles of subsidiarity: the lowest unit of society that is capable of accomplishing a needed social function in an adequate manner should be permitted to perform that function (from the family, to the local community, up to the centralized state). This preserves the vitality of the family, private groups, and local communities as well as the centralized state. It must not be oppose to eternal law.
Rulers are their subjects servants. The best regime for Aquinas is monarchy though he is willing to consider other regimes since no particular form of government is ordained by God. Rulers must protect the spiritual equality of humans. Man is bound to obey God and not man in spiritual affairs. Politics cannot produce perfect justice, perfect peace, or salvation.
A tyrant seeks to impose his or her own private interests by force as opposed the legitimate political leader who seeks peace, moral enhancement, and sufficient distribution of material goods. The tyrant is guilty of sedition from Aquinas perspective. Resistance to the injustice of the tyrant must be proportional to that injustice. Public authorities should remove a tyrant but appeal to divine intervention could be an alternative if this option is not available.
A ruler can lose the right to rule if behavior warrants. Aquinas identified extreme preconditions to warrant a revolution against a tyrant:
The tyranny must be excessive; otherwise using coercion to move against a tyrant may bring about greater dangers if the violent resistance should fail and the tyrant becomes even more vicious. Great care must be given that the effort to overthrow the tyrant does not produce greater social factionalism and dissent among the people. The leadership in removing the tyrant must support the common good and not private interests or passions, making every reasonable effort not to substitute a new tyrant for the old one. Private judgment must not to determine whether a tyrant who refuses to surrender should be slain, thereby emphasizing the principle of a public body representing the national good as a whole.
Resistance to Tyranny
Toward the end of World War II, Count Klaus von Stauffenberg, a devout Roman Catholic German colonel, sought to organize an act of violent resistance against Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944. He concluded that Hitlers brutal tyranny and the well-developed military resistance organization against Hitler justified a bombing attempt on Hitlers life in terms of Aquinas prudential norms for a legitimate revolution. The resistance failed. After doing some research on the July 20, 1944 resistance movement would you conclude that Colonel von Stauffenbergs attempted tyrannicide was reasonable in Aquinas terms? One could ask this question in reference to the American revolution or to the coalition that sought the removal of Saddam Hussein from power.
Just War
War for power, wealth, and glory is unjustified according Aquinas. In order for a war to be just it must meet the following criteria:
Just cause 1. protecting people from aggression; 2. restoring rights that have been wrongly taken away; and 3. reestablishing a just order. Just authority Legitimate authorities must make the decision to go to war. Last resort All peaceable alternatives to war have been exhausted. Proportionality The destructive impact of the war must be less than the good to be obtained by the war. Reasonable chance of success There is a reasonable chance of obtaining one of the justifiable objectives. Right intention The war must be launched in a spirit of love.
Mortimer J. Adler
Mortimer Jerome Adler (December 28, 1902 June 28, 2001) was an American philosopher, educator, and popular author. As a philosopher he worked within theAristotelian and Thomistic traditions. He lived for the longest stretches in New York City,Chicago, San Francisco, and San Mateo, California. He worked for Columbia University, the University of Chicago, Encyclopdia Britannica, and Adler's own Institute for Philosophical Research.
Mortimer Jerome Adler (December 28, 1902 June 28, 2001) was an American philosopher, educator, and popular author. As a philosopher he worked within theAristotelian and Thomistic traditions. He lived for the longest stretches in New York City,Chicago, San Francisco, and San Mateo, California. He worked for Columbia University, the University of Chicago, Encyclopdia Britannica, and Adler's own Institute for Philosophical Research.
Education is lifelong
Enlarged understanding of Ideas and Values Socratic Questioning and active Participation
Discussion of books and other work of art And Involvement in artistic activities (music drama art)
Preschool learning (2-3 years) Same educational objectives Same course of study No electives for the 12 years Satisfactory standard of accomplishment
The thrust of our argument so far has been that basic schooling ought to prepare every child to learn a living and live a good life. But there is one more reason for exerting every effort to improve basic schooling. We must also do it to preserve our free institutions.
Adler page 77 The Paideia Proposal