St. Thomas Aquinas

by G. K. Chesterton

Paper Book, 1956

Status

Available

Call number

BX4700.T6 C5 1956

Publication

Garden City, N.Y., Image Books [1956]

Physical description

167 p.; 18 cm

Barcode

3000003075

User reviews

LibraryThing member lukeasrodgers
This is a great little book. I grew up with a hazy view of the Fransiscans as having been true men of faith, while the over-intellectuality of the Dominicans (of which Aquinas was a member) led them to a distorted and drier faith. This book helps dispel that contrast, and in fact plays on the
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differences and similarities between Francis and Thomas a good deal.

The second chief merit of this book is in its ability to give the reader a more nuanced view of the late Middle Ages. Despite us now "knowing better" it is difficult to rid oneself of a simplistic picture of the philosophy and theology of this period, and indeed of Aquinas, as having been concerned with the old question of how many angels were able to fit on the head of a pin. Chesterton depicts an Aquinas whose philosophy was so much richer than that; and also, indeed, helps to undo some of the equally inaccurate prejudices against the Middles Ages and the Scholastics they are still kicking around from the early modern period.

The book suffers--unfortunately quite a good deal, and it gets worse as the book goes on--from Chesterton's polemicizing and stridency. He is at his worst when he is defending Aquinas' "common sense" philosophy from the heresies of modern philosophy, and pretty much all other philosophy in general.
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LibraryThing member ben_a
This is not Chesterton at his best. I understand that any history of Aquinas he writes must needs be a polemical history, but here the polemi seizes control and pages fly by while the Author defends the Church against Albigensians, Henry II, modern prejudices, and Siger of Brabant. And all this is
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done at a level of abstraction which renders the debate unilluminating, at least to me. Eighty pages in, I quit. That said, even bad Chesterton is pretty good. "They say the road to hell is paved with good intentions. But that is precisely the one thing it cannot be paved with." (2.18.07)
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LibraryThing member KirkLowery
I must admit that I had high expectations of this book. G. K. Chesterton has a huge reputation as a writer. Since he was a devout Catholic, I expected an excellent book on Thomas. I was disappointed.



First, the author does not give a coherent narrative of Thomas' life. He makes many references to
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events and people of the 13th century (a good thing), but he expects the reader to already know about them. You will get a great deal more out of this book if you have already read an encyclopedia article on both him and the 13th century.



The book is really a hagiography of Thomas, a series of meditations about the man, his life and his thought. It is uncritically complimentary of Thomas, and only filled with praise of him, even or especially when noting his flaws.



The writing style, while entertaining, chases rabbits everywhere. The self-deprecating authorial voice is very loud and annoying. For a journalist and popular writer, he is remarkably unwilling to get to the point.



However, the chapters "The Approach to Thomism" and "The Permanent Philosophy" are worth reading, and I thought them to be very helpful on understanding what Thomas the Philosopher is all about. In the last chapter, sadly, Chesterton descends into partisan propaganda, railing (very unfairly, in my view) against Martin Luther as the very opposite of Aquinas; he even calls Luther a barbarian, evidence of his rhetorical intent. Thomas himself would have chided Chesterton for his incivility and unfairness.



If you are looking (as I was) for an entry-level introduction to Aquinas, look elsewhere. Josef Pieper's "A Guide to Thomas Aquinas" would be a good place to start.
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LibraryThing member citizencane
G.K. Chesterton's biography of Aquinas is clearly open to criticism as more hagiography than biography. Allowing for that and taking into consideration the brevity of the work and the minimal sketch of the details of Aquinas' life, it is nevertheless an outstanding book that distills the essence of
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Aquinas' philosophy, theology and his resulting place of prominence among the Fathers of the Church.

Chesterton relates the familiar stories about Aquinas's personal history, some of which I could recall from grammar school days under the tutelage of Domincian nuns. There is the story of his family's opposition to his ambitions to join the order of St. Dominic by kidnapping him, imprisoning him and even engaging a prostitute to tempt him and corrupt him. (This part of the story was omitted by the nuns.)

Chesterton elaborates on the controversy over incorporating the philosophy of Aristotle into his theology and causing the eclipse of Neo-Platonism with what Chesterton calls an Aristotelian revolution. He chronicles Aquinas' controversies with Siger of Brabant who drew a line between two separate spheres of truth, the province of science and the province of Christianity which are ultimately unreconcilable. To the extent that any claims are made for truth in Christianity today, this is pretty much the modern view of the validity of the respective claims of science and faith.
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LibraryThing member DeaconBernie
First, I don't really feel qualified to review this book. Chesterton seems to be having a one-way conversation with his peers. I am far from a peer of G.K. Chesterton. From a comprehension standpoint, I'd say somewhere between 15 and 19%. What I did manage to glean is magnificent. If I had the
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necessary years left, I'd begin directly on St. Thomas Aquinas but that is not the way I'll go. I recognize in life today a few of the things that the Saint urged to avoid but we didn't.
As for Chesterton's writing, it is clear even when the subject is difficult. Now, on to his books on Fr. Brown where I think my comprehension will be better.
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Original publication date

1933

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