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New book on Aquinas

Second_Person_Book_Pinsent

"The Second-Person Perspective in Aquinas's Ethics: Virtues and Gifts"

New book on Aquinas by Fr Andrew Pinsent, Routledge 2012.

This book applies some of the latest research in science, especially in the study of social cognition and autistic spectrum disorder, to propose a new interpretation of Aquinas's virtue ethics. Instead of understanding the life of grace, including virtues, gifts, beatitudes and fruits, as a 'higher' version of the life of nature, this book interprets grace as transfiguring nature, based on a change from a third-personal to a second-personal mode of relating to God. To use a contemporary metaphor, the infused virtues and gifts remove the 'spiritual autism' of the state of nature.

Based on research carried out at St Louis University with Prof. Eleonore Stump and at the Theology Faculty of Oxford University, the questions addressed in this book, especially the relationship of natural and supernatural, were raised originally in discussions at the Pontifical Gregorian University with Fr Marcus Holden, Fr Kevin Flannery SJ and Fr Joseph Carola SJ. Although intended principally for scholars, the research underpins ideas found in several products of the Evangelium Project, and has far-reaching implications for theology, philosophy and spirituality.

Product description

Thomas Aquinas devoted a substantial proportion of his greatest works to the virtues. Yet, despite the availability of these texts (and centuries of commentary), Aquinas’s virtue ethics remains mysterious, leaving readers with many unanswered questions.

In this book, Fr Andrew argues that the key to understanding Aquinas’s approach is to be found in an association between: a) attributes he appends to the virtues, and b) interpersonal capacities investigated by the science of social cognition, especially in the context of autistic spectrum disorder. The book uses this research to argue that Aquinas’s approach to the virtues is radically non-Aristotelian and founded on the concept of second-person relatedness.

To demonstrate the explanatory power of this principle, Fr Andrew shows how the second-person perspective gives interpretation to Aquinas’s descriptions of the virtues and offers a key to long-standing problems, such as the reconciliation of magnanimity and humility. The principle of second-person relatedness also interprets acts that Aquinas describes as the fruition of the virtues. Fr Andrew concludes by considering how this approach may shape future developments in virtue ethics.

Review comments

"This is a work of lasting value and deep and careful scholarship that makes a serious contribution to three fields at once: the exegesis of Aquinas, theological ethics and philosophical virtue ethics. Andrew Pinsent has written a book that no one working in these areas will be able to afford to ignore, and which makes a real contribution, in particular, to getting the study of Aquinas’s virtue ethics, as something radically distinct from Aristotelian virtue ethics, firmly onto the academic agenda."  --Timothy Chappell, Professor of Philosophy, Open University, UK

 "In this intriguing re-reading of Thomas’s virtue ethics, Andrew Pinsent firmly resists the reduction of Thomist ethics to a mere variation on Aristotelian ethics, and shows with meticulous attention to the texts how Thomas's theology of grace and of the 'gifts' vitally transforms his understanding of virtue. The discussion is animated by reference to contemporary analyses of ‘second-person relatedness’ in social science, a move which is bound to be contentious but is remarkably thought-provoking."  --Sarah Coakley, Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, UK

 "This is an exhilarating book. If Dr. Pinsent’s central thesis about the radically non-Aristotelian character of Aquinas’s theory is right, he has given us a fresh and important insight into the latter’s understanding of the virtues and a greater appreciation of its genius. If it is wrong, we are still left with a treasure trove of fascinating ideas that might be applied to the interpretation of both authors, but especially Aquinas."  --Kevin Flannery, Professor of Philosophy, Pontifical Gregorian University, Italy

 

The Last Things DVD

The Last Things DVD Cover

The Last Things

by Christian Holden

St Anthony Communications has recently launched a new DVD, "The Last Things," a production in collaboration with members of the Evangelium Project. With a running time of 32 minutes, the DVD provides an insightful, beautiful and sensitive presentation of the timeless truths of the Catholic Faith concerning those things that bring each and every human life to its conclusion.

Product description

For each and every person in this world, through all the trials and uncertainties, there is one thing we can all be certain about: we will die. Despite this reality, many people spend their lives trying to ignore or avoid contemplating their own mortality. And yet, without approaching each day of our lives with this reality in mind, we are unable to fully grow and mature in the spiritual life and become the saints we are called to be.

This film presents the reality of death and what will follow for every person: first the particular Judgment before God, then Heaven or Hell as our destination for all eternity. The Catholic teaching on Purgatory is also explained giving examples from the Scriptures and philosophy.

Powerful music and imagary is used throughout the film and commentary is provided by four priests: Fr Andrew Pinsent, Fr Jeremy Davies, Fr Marcus Holden and Fr Beruz Rafat.
 

 

Fr Marcus on Channel 4

26 May 2011. Fr Marcus Holden, co-founder of the Evangelium Project, responds to the question,

"Should Catholic Priests be Celibate?"

in the Channel 4 series of short films, 4thought.tv.

The Evangelium Project is not responsible for the content of external websites.

 

News from 2011 Conference

Evangelium Group photo 2011

The fourth Evangelium Summer Conference attracted over 150 participants to a joyful gathering at the Reading Oratory School, 5 – 7 August 2011. Focusing this year on the theme of the Catholic reading of Scripture, the conference covered many topics important for evangelisation in the modern world and provided a great opportunity for young people to meet others who share their faith.

The conference was also blessed by the presence of Rt Rev. Mark Davies, Bishop of Shrewsbury, and some of the newly ordained clergy of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. Bishop Davies encouraged those present in the task of the ‘new evangelisation’. In his homily, cited at length in a recent article in the Catholic Herald (12 August), Bishop Davies referred to the re-discovery, often by the young, of the Catholic faith as a ‘coherent whole’, referring to the “Holy Eucharist, the grace of Confession, the Bible as the Church’s book, the Rosary as a Gospel prayer, the witness of the saints in whom we see the Church at its truest, a new love for Mary, a genuine loyalty to the Successor of Peter, the courage for a new evangelisation.”

Other speakers included Steve Ray, a world famous Catholic evangelist and former Baptist, Dr Edmund Adamus, Fr Jerome Bertram, Joanna Bogle, Fr Thomas Crean OP, Fr Philip Harris, Dr Andrew Nash, Fiorella Nash, Sr Roseann Reddy, Dr Joseph Shaw and Rev. Ed Tomlinson of the Ordinariate. The conference also provided an opportunity to showcase the new DVDs Hostia: the Power and Presence of the Eucharist and Keys of the Kingdom: Understanding the Papacy by St Anthony Communications. The conference was sponsored by the Catholic Truth Society and organised by the Evangelium Project. The next Evangelium conference is planned for 3 – 5 August 2012.

Pictures courtesy of Lulu Shutterbug.

Evangelium 2011 from above

 

The Ordinariate and Evangelium

Monsignor Keith Newton, Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, being received in a private audience by His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI, April 2011

The Ordinariate and Evangelium

The founders and associates of the Evangelium Project extend a heartfelt welcome to the new members of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, established following the Apostolic Constitution Anglicanorum coetibus. We are delighted that the Evangelium Course has been recommended as a catechetical resource for new members, and is already being widely used. We are also delighted that Rev. Ed Tomlinson, priest of the Ordinariate, will be joining us for the 2011 Evangelium Summer Conference.

All the standard Evangelium products are available from the Catholic Truth Society. In addition, we hope to produce a short supplementary PowerPoint presentation specifically on the Ordinariate, downloadable from this site before long.

In the meantime, we also strongly recommend three short DVDs, published by St Anthony Communications, based on interviews filmed during the Evangelium Conferences:

May God bless you

Fr Andrew Pinsent and Fr Marcus Holden

 
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