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Duns Scotus on the Will and Morality PDF

355 Pages·1997·24.984 MB·English
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DUNSSCOTUS on the Will and Morality DUNSSCOTUS on the Will and Morality Selected & Translated with an Introduction by Alan B. Wolter, O.EM. Translation Edition Edited by William A. Frank The Catholic University of America Press Washington, D.C. Copyright © 1986,1997 The Catholic University of America Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standards for Information Science--Permanence of Paper for Printed Library materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Ubrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Duns Scotus, John, ca. 1266-1308. [Selections. English. 19971 Duns Scotus on the will and morality I selected and translated with an introduction by Allan B. Wolter: edited by William A. Frank.-Translation ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. I. Ethics, Medieval. 2. Will-Early works to 1800. I. Wolter. Allan Bernard, 1913- . I I. Frank, William A. II I. Title. B765·1l731l8613 1997 171' .2-dc21 97-2325 ISBN-IO: 0-8132-0895-5 (alk. paper) ISBN-I 3: 978-0-8132-0895-4 Contents Preface to This Edition ix Preface to the Original Edition xvii Introduction I General Remarks 3 I. Scotus' metaphysical notion of God 5 I. How divine free will differs from ours 9 2. 3. God's voluntary selrlove as both free and necessary I I 4. Right reason governs God's relationship to creatures 16 5. The moral law as accessible to reason 25 n. Notes on the Specific Selections 3 I Part I. The will and intellect 3 I I : Practical science 32 2. The will as a rational faculty 35 3. How the will controls thought 37 4. Coercion and free will 39 Part II. The will and its inclinations 39 5· The will and its inclinations 39 6. Natural will and natural volition 41 7· Happiness 42 8. Synderesis and conscience 45 Part lll. Moral goodness 47 9· The nature of moral goodness 47 10. The source of moral goodness 48 I I . Degrees of moral goodness and badness 48 12. Does the end alone justify actions? 5 I 13· Morally indifferent acts 52 14. Is moral goodness conformity to God's will? 53 Part IV. God and the moral law 54 15· God's justice 54 16. God's absolute and ordained power 56 Contents Vl Part v. The moral law in general 57 I7. Natural law and divine positive law 57 I8. The decalogue and the law of nature 60 I 9. On marriage and bigamy 64 20. Divorce and the Mosaic law 72 2 I. Positive law and civil authority 73 Part VI. The intellectual and moral virtues 75 22. The will as the seat of the moral virtues 75 23. Moral virtue and the gifts and fruits of the Spirit 78 24. Are the moral virtues connected? 84 Part VII. The love of God, self, and neighbor 89 25. The infused virtue of charity 89 26. Love of God and neighbor 94 27. Love of God and self 97 Part VIII. Sin 98 28. Is the power to sin from God? 98 29. The sin of Lucifer 100 30. The sin of malice 105 3 I. Lying 106 32. Perjury IIO 33. The obligation to keep secrets I I3 34. The sin of enslavement II 4 Texts in Translation Part I. The Will and Intellect 127 I. Practical science 127 2. The will as a rational faculty 136 3. How the will controls thought ISO 4. Coercion and free will 151 Part II. The Will and Its Inclinations 153 5. The will and its inclinations 153 6. Natural will and natural volition 154 7· Happiness ISS 8. Synderesis and conscience 162 Part lll. Moral Goodness 167 9. The nature of moral goodness 167 Contents vii 10. The source of moral goodness 169 I I. Degrees of moral goodness and badness I 73 12. Does the end alone justify actions? 176 13. Morally indifferent acts 178 14. Is moral goodness conformity to God's will? IBI Part IV. God and the Moral Law 183 15. God's justice 183 16. God's absolute and ordained power 191 Part v. The Moral Law in General 195 17. Natural law and divine positive law 195 18. The decalogue and the law of nature 198 19. On marriage and bigamy 20B 20. Divorce and the Mosaic law 2 I 2 21. Positive law and civil authority 219 Part VI. The Intellectual and Moral Virtues 223 22. The will as the seat of the moral virtues 223 23. Moral virtue and the gifts and fruits of the Spirit 237 24. Are the moral virtues connected? 252 Part VII. The Love of God, Self, and Neighbor 275 25. The infused virtue of charity 26. Love of God and neighbor 27. Love of God and self 291 Part VIII. Sin 293 2B. Is the power to sin from God? 293 29. The sin of Lucifer 295 30. The sin of malice 302 3 I. Lying 304 32. Perjury 314 33. The obligation to keep secrets 323 34. The sin of enslavement 325 Bibliography 331 Topical Index 341 Preface to This Edition Since the appearance of the original edition of Duns Scotus on the Will and Morality, there has been a remarkable growth of interest in the thought of this early fourteenth,century Franciscan master. In part, this renaissance reflects the spate of scholarly activity associated with the official recognition of the cult of John Duns Scotus when John Paul II confirmed his status as blessed during a Solemn Vespers in the Basilica of St. Peter in 1993. It is also the case that Allan Wolter's book on Scotus' volitional and ethical doctrine has itself provoked and guided a good deal of the recent inquiry. Whatever the source of the activity, it has become evident since the recent international Scotus conferences held in Rome and Bonn that there is active interest among philosophical scholars along several lines of investigation directly connected with Duns Scotus on the Will and Morality. The following three areas deserve special mention: (I) Scotus' metaphysics of freedom and contingency (e.g., Vos, 1994; Dumont, 1995; Frank, 1992; Honnefelder, 1991; and Wolter, 1990a), (2) his anthropological doctrine of the will (e.g., Boler, 1990, 1993; Incandela, 1992; and Adams, 1987, 1995), and (3) Scotistic ethical theory (e.g., Adams, 1986; Santogrossi, 1994; Shannon, 1995, and especially Ingham, 1996). In fact, these investigations have enabled us to begin to see more critically a unity of concern in Scotistic thought. In the balance of my remarks I shall try to sharpen the focus on this unifying thread. The problem of freedom. The lodestone of Scotus' theological vision is the idea of Divine Love, as understood both within the mutuality of the Trinitarian Persons and in God's relation to creation. His philo, sophical thought expresses this fundamental reality under the aspects of the metaphysics of contingency and the experience of freedom. Scotistic freedom, however, is a subtle notion that does not easily adjust itself to classical Greek or medieval concepts of nature and sci, ence, nor does it happily jibe with prevailing modem libertarian strains of thought. It is precisely this seminal understanding of free, dom that has been increasingly brought to the fore in the last ten or fifteen years of scholarship. The correct understanding of the God/world relationship is one of the more important metaphysical questions in which freedom is a cen, tral issue. This is especially true in the case of Christian thinkers, and ix

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