Résumé
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Are Baius and Jansenius excessive Augustinians, or are they mistaken Augustinians? Modern theology considers them to be the latter. From the 16th to the 20th century, it has envisaged a new kind of relation between man and God, opposing a natural end and a supernatural one. Here, Father de Lubac develops the case he made in the first part of Supernatural. He has refined his understanding of Baius et de Jansenius. He shows the philosophical reasons for opposing two ends and those reasons come from Avicenna, the Iranian 11th century philosopher, and Averroes, an Arab 12th century philosopher whose thinking dominated Paduan teaching in the 15th and 16th centuries. Saint Thomas had opposed them 'in the most efficient manner by prolonging Saint Augustine and Christianizing Aristotle'. Henri de Lubac explains more clearly the rupture between philosophy and theology, provoked by that opposition of two ends, as thought by theologians. 'Separate philosophies, which became secularized theologies, owe much to separate theology.
L'auteur - Henri de Lubac
Autres livres de Henri de Lubac
Caractéristiques techniques
PAPIER | |
Éditeur(s) | Cerf |
Auteur(s) | Henri de Lubac |
Collection | Henri de lubac |
Parution | 08/01/2009 |
Format | 13.5 x 21.5 |
Couverture | Broché |
Poids | 624g |
EAN13 | 9782204087940 |
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