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26 - The effect of the condemnation of 1277

from VII - Natural philosophy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

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Summary

Potentia Dei absoluta

The Condemnation of 219 articles in theology and natural philosophy by the bishop of Paris in 1277 points to a significant development in the history of medieval philosophy generally, but especially natural philosophy. Whatever may have induced bishop Stephen Tempier and his advisers to promulgate the condemnation, the most significant outcome was an emphasis on the reality and importance of God's absolute power (potentia Dei absoluta)to do whatever He pleases short of bringing about a logical contradiction. Although the doctrine of God's absolute power was hardly new in the thirteenth century, the introduction into the Latin West of Greco-Arabic physics and natural philosophy, with their independent, and often deterministic, philosophical and scientific explanatory principles, conferred on that doctrine a new and more significant status. After 1277, appeals to God's absolute power were frequently introduced into discussions of Aristotelian physics and cosmology.

The range of the Condemnation

The wide range of topics covered by the Condemnation indicates its potential impact on natural philosophy. Among the themes at which several articles were directed are God's knowability, nature, will, and power; the causation and eternality of the world; the nature and function of intelligences; the nature and operation of the heavens and the generation of terrestrial things; the necessity and contingency of events; the principles of material objects; man and the active intellect. Whether implicitly or explicitly, many of the articles asserted God's infinite and absolute creative and causative power against those who those who thought to circumscribe it by the principles of natural philosophy.

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The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy
From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism, 1100–1600
, pp. 537 - 539
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1982

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References

Combes, A. and Ruello, F. (eds.) (1967).‘Jean de Ripa I Sent. Dist. XXXVII: De modo inexistendi divine essentie in omnibus creatures’, Traditio 23:.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fortin, E. L. and O'Neill, P. D. (tr.) (1963). ‘the condemnation of 1277’, in Lerner, R. and Mahdi, M. (eds.) medieval political philosophy: a source book, the free press of glencoeGoogle Scholar
Grant, E. (ed.) (1974). A Source Book in Medieval Science, Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Hissette, R. (1977). Enquête sur les 219 articles condamnés à Paris le 7 Mars 1277, Publications Universitaires de LouvainGoogle Scholar
Hyman, A., and Walsh, J. J., eds. (1967). Philosophy in the Middle Ages, Harper and RowGoogle Scholar
Mandonnet, P. (1908–11). Siger de Brabant et I'averroisme latin au XIIIe siècle (2nd ed.) (2 vols.), (Les Philosophes Beiges), Institut Supérieur de Philosophic de l'Universite de LouvainGoogle Scholar

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