Guide to Thomas Aquinas

by Josef Pieper

Paperback, 1991

Status

Available

Call number

BX4700.T6 P53

Description

One of the great philosophers of the 20th Century, Josef Pieper, gives a penetrating introduction and guide to the life and works of perhaps the greatest philosopher ever, St. Thomas Aquinas. Pieper provides a biography of Aquinas, an overview of the 13th century he lived in, and a wonderful synthesis of his vast writings. Pieper shows how Aquinas reconciled the pragmatic thought of Aristotle with the Church, proving that realistic knowledge need not preclude belief in the spiritual realities of religion. According to Pieper, the marriage of faith and reason proposed by Aquinas in his great synthesis of a theologically founded worldliness was not merely one solution among many, but the great principle expressing the essence of the Christian West. Pieper reveals his extraordinary command of original sources and excellent secondary materials as he illuminates the thought of the great intellectual Doctor of the Church.… (more)

Publication

Ignatius Press (1991), Edition: First, 192 pages

Pages

192

ISBN

0898703190 / 9780898703191

UPC

008987031901

Language

Original language

German

Physical description

192 p.; 7.98 inches

Rating

(12 ratings; 4)

User reviews

LibraryThing member hnn
A wonderful little book, describing Aquinas and his methodology in its historical environment.
LibraryThing member KirkLowery
I have found that European scholars in the humanities always do the best job of providing a "guide" or "introduction" to a discipline. That is certainly true here. Pieper uses his profound knowledge of Thomas Aquinas to choose out what would best help a student new to the subject. The book is a
Show More
series of lectures prepared for his university classes. It puts Aquinas in his 13th century historical context, especially the rise of the university, and explains the nature of the literary genre that Aquinas used. Pieper's view of Aquinas: a person committed to knowing Things As They Are; hence, he embraced Aristotle (just then becoming known in the West) and the Bible, seeing the task of the philosopher and the theologian to be the same: the right understanding of reality. Highly recommended for those interested in reading Aquinas himself.
Show Less
LibraryThing member stillatim
A better title might be 'A Preface to Thomas Aquinas,' since Pieper spends very little time on Aquinas's ideas, and a lot of time on the context surrounding them: the rise of the university and its methods of teaching and learning, of Aristotle, of the preaching orders, and so on. It's all very
Show More
easy to read until the final lectures, which do get into the ideas, broadly understood, and at that point Pieper's Germanity comes out a little bit more. But certainly a good place to start if you want a very sympathetic introduction to Aquinas's life, times and context.
Show Less

LCC

BX4700.T6 P53
Page: 0.1123 seconds