2. BIG QUESTION in MEDIEVAL
EPOCH….
WHAT IS FAITH?
WHAT IS RELIGION?
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3. Faith is personal: INTERNAL, Within the power
of the “I”. It is both the cognitive and the
emotive. It is within the context of it and NOT
bound with QUANDARY.
BASIS
Religion: EXTERNAL: bound with the choice we
made. It can be change. It is structural and
functional.
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6. Medieval Philosophy
• Medieval philosophy is the
philosophy in the era now
known as medieval or the
Middle Ages, the period
roughly extending from the fall
of the Western Roma Empire
in the fifth century AD to the
Renaissance in the sixteenth
century
• Essentially “monotheistic”
• From a state of polytheism to a
belief in a one and only God.
• God here is the center of
man’s life Medieval philosophy is not to be
separated from theology
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8. The Dark Ages
• The "Dark Ages" is a historical
period emphasizing the cultural
and economic deterioration that
occurred in Europe following the
decline of the Roma Empire.
• The label employs traditional
“light-versus darkness” imagery to
contrast the "darkness" of the
period with earlier and later
periods of "light“ (Middle Age).
• The period is characterized by a
relative scarcity of historical and
other written records at least for
some areas of Europe, rendering it
obscure to historians.
Petrarch conceived the idea of a European "Dark Age".
From Cycle of Famous Men and Women, c. 1450
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9. Challenged Church AuthorityChallenged Church Authority
• In the 16th century,In the 16th century,
various humanistsvarious humanists
had begun to askhad begun to ask
dangerous questions.dangerous questions.
• The EnlightenmentThe Enlightenment
allowed people toallowed people to
believe in progress,believe in progress,
to “think outside theto “think outside the
box,” and it led tobox,” and it led to
the rise ofthe rise of
individualismindividualism
The Ninety-Five Theses, (1517) written by Martin
Luther, described his hopes and wants for reform in the
Catholic Church. This effectively challenged the pope'e
authority and the infallibility of the general council, and
eventually led to Luther being excommunicated from
the church and declared a public enemy by the
state.The 95 Theses were translated into German and
Luther's ideas were circulated throughout the empire.RPC2013
10. Medieval Philosophy
• The term medieval refers to the Middle Ages,
the time in European history between classical
antiquity and the Italian Renaissance, from
about 500 A.D. to about 1350 ( 13th
)
• Medieval philosophy is theocentric in its
character.
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11. • During the decline of Greco-Roman
civilization, Western philosophers turned their
attention from the scientific investigation of
nature and the search for happiness in this
world, to the problem of salvation and life in
another, better world.
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12. • The torch of civilization in Western Europe
was carried mainly by the Christian Church,
where thought were conducted under the
context of Christian doctrines
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13. • By the 3rd
century AD, Christianity had spread
throughout the Roman Empire.
• The religious teachings of the Gospels were
combined by the Fathers of the Church with
many of the philosophical concepts of the
Greeks and Roman schools.
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15. St. Augustine
“You are great, O Lord, and man desires to
praise you. You so excite him that to praise
you is his joy. For you have made us for
yourself and our hearts are restless until they
rest in You.”
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16. Conversion
• His mother urged him
to be baptized.
• Began to study under
Saint Ambrose.
• Became fascinated by
intellectual nature of
faith.
• Was not baptized, at
first, because he didn’t
want to give up life of
sin.
17. His Philosophical Beliefs
• The man with his strength does not exceed
this vicious cycle of not being able to not want
what cannot get
• Only the grace of Christ save us
• History is called original sin
Jesus says that the Holy Spirit "will convince the world
concerning sin" (Jn 16:8). As I tried to penetrate these words,
I was led back to the opening pages of the Book of Genesis, to
the event known as "original sin."
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18. • described the nature of this sin as
follows: amor sui usque ad contemptum Dei
—self-love to the point of contempt for God.
• It was amor sui which drove our first parents
toward that initial rebellion and then gave rise
to the spread of sin throughout human
history.
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19. • The Book of Genesis speaks of this: "you will
be like God, knowing good and evil" (Gn 3:5),
in other words, you yourselves will decide
what is good and what is evil.
• Man is not, in general, self-sufficient: marked
by original sin, is called to communion with
God, in Christ.
• This non-self-sufficiency is also seen in the
field of knowledge. It's Christ truth (as interior
Teacher , through the illumination).
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20. Based only on his natural cognitive forces , the
man would not go very far, however: it lacks a
"center of permanent gravity", enabling him
to judge in a stable and suitable the reality
that is the object of his experience.
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21. Saint Augustine’s words.
• “You have made us
for yourself, and our
hearts are restless
until they rest in
you.”
Saint Augustine
“Confessions”.
22. His legacy.
• He believed humans
cannot experience true
happiness until they
find God.
• His work centred
around the notion that
everything in the world
is basically good.
• He wrote many works
over his lifetime.
• He attempted to dispel
heresy and
blasphemous
ideologies.
24. The Nature of God
• Aquinas developed a list of the (5)
five divine qualities:
1. God is simple, without
composition of parts, such
as body and soul, or matter
and form.
2. God is perfect, lacking
nothing. That is, God is
distinguished from other
beings on account of God's
complete actuality.Thomas
defined God as the ‘Ipse
Actus Essendi subsistens,’
subsisting act of being.
25. 3. God is infinite. That is, God is not finite in the ways that
created beings are physically, intellectually, and emotionally
limited. This infinity is to be distinguished from infinity of size
and infinity of number.
4. God is immutable, incapable of change on the levels of
God's essence and character.
5. God is one, without diversification within God's self. The
unity of God is such that God's essence is the same as God's
existence. In Thomas's words, "in itself the proposition 'God
exists' is necessarily true, for in it subject and predicate are
the same.”
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26. Overview
• An Italian-born monk who taught at the
University of Paris
• Born: January 28th
, 1225 in Roccasecca, Sicily
• Died: March 7th
, 1274 in Fossanova, Sicily
• Taught that faith came first and greatly
expanded the scope of reason
• Major figure in scholasticism
27. Reason
• Aquinas retained the basic belief
while studying reason
• He believed that:
1. Humans could – through reason
alone – know much of the natural
order, moral law, and the nature
of God
2. All essential knowledge could be
organized coherently
• Wrote a series of Summas
(highest works) that employed
careful logic to counter any
possible objections to truth as
revealed by reason and faith
28. Summas
• Summa Theologica: Most well-known and
best work of Aquinas
• Intended as a sort of introduction to theology
and the main theological points of Church
doctrine
• Three parts:
– Part One: God’s existence, the creation of the
world, angels, and the nature of man
– Part Two: Morality (general and specific)
– Part Three: Christ, the Sacraments, and the end
of the world
29. Ethics
• Four Cardinal Virtues:
1.Prudence
2.Temperance
3. Justice
4.Fortitude
• Three Theological Virtues: .
1.Faith
2.Hope
3.Charity
30. Four types of Law:
1. Eternal: direct word of God, governs all Creation
2. Natural: human adherence to eternal law,
discovered by reason
3. Human: positive law (natural law applied to
human government and society)
4. Divine: the law as defined in the scriptures
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31. The Existence of God can be
proved in five ways.
1. Argument from Motion
2. Argument from Efficient Causes
3. Argument from Possibility and Necessity
(Reduction argument)
4. Argument from Gradation of Being
5. Argument from Design
-----VIDEO CLIP-----
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32. First Way - The Argument From
Motion
1. Nothing can move itself.
2. If every object in motion
had a mover, then the first
object in motion needed a
mover.
3. Movement cannot go on
for infinity.
4. This first mover is the
Unmoved Mover, called
God.
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33. EXPLANATION FROM 1st
CAUSE
The Argument From Motion
St. Thomas Aquinas:
•studying the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle
concluded from common observation:
that an object that is in motion (e.g. the planets, a rolling
stone) is put in motion by some other object or force.
From this, Aquinas believes that ultimately there must
have been an UNMOVED MOVER (GOD) who first put things in
motion.
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34. ST. ANSELM
• Anselm's motto is “faith seeking
understanding” (fides quaerens intellectum)
• St. Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109 CE) was
a Christian philosopher.
• He was Archbishop of Canterbury from the age
of 60 until his death
35. The Ontological Argument
• Anselm is perhaps most famous for
developing the ontological argument for the
existence of God.
1.God is that than which nothing greater can be
conceived.
2.It is greater to exist than to not exist.
3.Therefore, God exists.
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36. RPC2013
To one who has faith, no
explanation is necessary. To one
without faith, no explanation is
possible.
---Thomas Aquinas