But the point about that school is, it is about the last remaining outpost of the perennial tradition that is still alive in Western culture. — Wayfarer
although I don't share his Catholic convictions. — Wayfarer
I also ask this because I'm not religious in any way, and am skeptical of a deity, and kinda want to see some other perspectives and fight the cognitive dissonance for self-improvement sake. — darthbarracuda
I was contemplating buying one of his books on Thomistic metaphysics — darthbarracuda
Aquinas had his Five Ways that make Thomism famous, but is that all that's really different from him and Aristotle other than his efforts to fit Aristotelianism into Catholicism - theology? — darthbarracuda
They were free to think within the confines of Scripture. Like Whitehead said: Christianity is a religion looking for a metaphysics (...while Buddhism is a metaphysics looking for a religion). — darthbarracuda
I'm not sure if that is sarcastic which, if so, is kind of funny. — schopenhauer1
But what I meant is he could have put his theological tendencies energies into Neoplatonism proper or traditional Greco-Roman schools of though but instead he became the mouthpiece of what would become orthodox Christian thinking which became an oppressive system as it became one of the only allowable points of view. — schopenhauer1
Being heavily involved in what is considered right interpretation of Christian metaphysics/ethics and what is heretic- he along with other Church Fathers was a main architect of the demise of diverse thinking, heterodoxy, and the relative free thought of the upper classes enjoyed in Greco Riman times. — schopenhauer1
The Christian point of view being the "only" point of view carried over into the Middle Ages with scant alternative. — schopenhauer1
Granted, contingencies of Germanic tribal culture, the collapse of the Roman economy, and the general decline of knowledge didn't help- the archetype of only viewing philosophy in service of bolstering Christian belief was established. — schopenhauer1
I ask this because A-T philosophy is "apparently" having a bit of a revival in analytic circles. — darthbarracuda
However going back to the beginning, it's difficult to see how exactly A-T metaphysics is different from plain ol' Aristotelian metaphysics. — darthbarracuda
I believe it is important to recognize that Aquinas approached Aristotelian metaphysics from a firm Neo-Platonist foundation. Therefore his work was to interpret Aristotle in a way so as to establish consistency with Neo-Platonist principles. This involved selective referencing, and generally shaping the material to conform. I think that if an inverse situation had occurred, if one were to approach Neo-Platonic metaphysics from a stringent Aristotelian platform, such a consistency could not have been established. . — Metaphysician Undercover
You appear to be talking about Augustine. I would say that your criticism is quite unfounded. He did identify with pagan philosophies as a young man. He was a Neoplatonist and a Manichean before becoming a Christian, and if you want to know why he became the latter, you can read the Confessions. Secondly, I don't think anyone could honestly accuse Augustine of not having fully acquainted himself with Neoplatonism and other Greco-Roman schools of thought. He was probably the most learned and often sympathetic authority on these schools you could find in the entire Roman world at the time. Finally, trying to pin on Augustine all the alleged oppression perpetrated by Christianity is nothing more than a fallacious attempt to impute guilt by association. — Thorongil
I don't know, the demise of diverse thinking could have been due to the weakness and corruption of the later Western Roman emperors, the barbarian invasions, the cultural deterioration of Rome, and so on. — Thorongil
And? Most of the Roman world had converted to Christianity by the time it evaporated in the West, so I don't know what you expect. — Thorongil
I'm glad you clarified here, but I don't like your insinuation in the last part. I find most of the medieval philosophers to be genuine searchers after truth, not cynical opportunists making due under an oppressive church. The oppression thesis is simply too patronizing to these often profound thinkers. And remember that the seeds of the scientific, political, and philosophical revolutions of the early modern era were laid during the medieval period by these thinkers. — Thorongil
I acknowledge that, and hence why it is a tragedy that he chose, at the end, a narrow focus on Christianity — schopenhauer1
So he indirectly (in a link with other apologists) influenced the idea that philosophy is only in employment of Christian theology — schopenhauer1
Church being fused with the State in 380 CE (under Theodosius), persecution and coercion were the norm — schopenhauer1
1) Christian texts would be the only texts that mattered most for copying and recopying in monasteries and libraries. — schopenhauer1
Thus, the educated class, instead of following the dialectic to wherever it led, were instead following it wherever it led as long as it had the tinge of Christian belief. — schopenhauer1
3) The various inquisitions (the major ones being in the 14-1600s), crusades, and especially via Papal edict and Church Councils, were enforced via courts and kings who made alliances and thus indeed did keep a tight grip of Church order in this time period. — schopenhauer1
But why narrow? You are assuming in advance that Christianity is untrue, so that if someone like Augustine formally turns away from Neoplatonism and toward it, he is ipso facto making the wrong decision. — Thorongil
Yes, because he and others like him thought Christianity was true. A lemonade stand is likely to sell lemonade. — Thorongil
And prior to then, people converted to Christianity freely and in the teeth of brutal Roman persecution. Enough of them did so to constitute a majority of the population, which then carried over into the Middle Ages. Naturally, Christian rulers then persecuted others into conversion, but this was not the primary means of how the Roman world became Christian to begin with. — Thorongil
Here again you're simply parroting Russell's patronizing treatment of these philosophers. Has it ever occurred to you that perhaps, in following where the argument leads, they thought it lead to Christianity? — Thorongil
Correct. The Church had quite a bit of power, but it also encouraged philosophy, learning, etc. Like all large institutions it has a mixed history. — Thorongil
taking on the Christian system strait-jacketed his thought to then only view things in the prism of the core doctrines/beliefs of this belief system — schopenhauer1
freedom to explore other systems of ideas the way he was able to do in the relative diversity of ideas in late Antiquity. — schopenhauer1
I guess I have no problem if people choose to strait-jacket themselves into a belief system — schopenhauer1
It is when that one belief system becomes the dominant power in a region and systematically creates a climate and structure that disallows other points of view. — schopenhauer1
"Thorongil;15506"]If he voluntarily found the Christian system true, then he was not "strait-jacketed" into anything. Or would you rather him view things through the prism of doctrines and beliefs he thought to be false? —
Fully agreed. Nonetheless, I would be hesitant to praise diversity for its own sake. In modern cultures that do so, there is always a diversity of the false and the bad, which makes the truth harder to find and pursue. Could it also be that "enforcing" a certain set of beliefs produces a healthier, more harmonious, and culturally richer society? — Thorongil
Does it really impede the truly critical and original thinkers out there that much? I am reminded of the long history of the method of esoteric writing and a particular line about Meister Eckhart from Schopenhauer:
What is this supposed to imply? That one not ever commit oneself to what one finds to be true? That one must remain skeptical, even in the face of evidence to the contrary? Critical thinking doesn't, or needn't, cease when one commits oneself to a philosophical or religious system. — Thorongil
Well, it depends on the belief system. Christian Europe was far less destructive in this regard than the Muslim Middle East and North Africa, if only for the simple reason that the former produced all those things you seem to be indirectly praising, namely, freedom of speech and religion, democracy, modern science and philosophy, etc - whereas the latter actively fought against them. — Thorongil
So, like I was saying, Aquinas rather "bastardized" Aristotelianism. That's not to say that what he did was remarkable, but he certainly had an agenda to fulfill, it would seem. — darthbarracuda
I am willing to say he "took to the teachings and beliefs of a brand of Christianity as he saw it and thus philosophized about the world in those terms" rather than "strait-jacketing" — schopenhauer1
I only want emphasize that the difference with religious belief and any old philosophical belief is the expectation that one can only view other philosophies in relation to a core belief system rather than one amongst many. — schopenhauer1
A society is healthier with a diversity of beliefs without one dominating the other. — schopenhauer1
If there is some sort of prosperity or benefit that ensues from sameness in beliefs, does this outweigh the possibility for general freedom to entertain any belief? — schopenhauer1
Again, there was a time before this in Western history where one did not have to vow fealty to a system of thought. After this time period, it would return again. — schopenhauer1
one should not overlook the Church's concerted effort to keep its grip (trials of Galileo and Bruno, Protestant persecution, the Inquisition, Crusades, numerous individual trials on heresy, etc.). — schopenhauer1
This is too vague. — Thorongil
But this is impossible, There will always be some beliefs that dominate others, such as the belief that society is healthier with a diversity of beliefs without one dominating the other. — Thorongil
That was basically what I was asking. I don't have an answer to it, but it's a good question I think. — Thorongil
This and what you say before it is all granted, but I feel like adding some qualification here. Heresy was a state crime at the time. The inquisitors would hand over those accused to the state and the state would then determine the punishment; and the vast majority of those accused of heresy were not killed or tortured. Second, Galileo and Bruno did have demonstrably heretical and heterodox views, so it would make even less sense for the Church not to investigate them, considering they identified as Catholic. Lastly, the crusades were originally conceived as a defense of Christendom from Muslim invasion, not bloodthirsty imperialist and colonialist expeditions. — Thorongil
The tyranny of wanting to keep a society with a diversity of thought, just doesn't seem very stifling. — schopenhauer1
You must distinguish between "wanting" to have a diversity of thought and "allowing" for a diversity of thought. I'm all for the latter, but not the former. — Thorongil
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