Praeambula Fidei ralph mcinerny Praeambula Fidei thomism and the god of the philosophers the catholic university of america press Washington, D.C. Copyright © 2006 The Catholic University of America Press All rights reserved 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. ∞ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data McInerny, Ralph M. Praeambula fidei : Thomism and the God of the philosophers / Ralph McInerny. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8132-1458-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8132-1458-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Thomas, Aquinas, Saint, 1225?–1274. 2. Philosophical theology. 3. Aristotle. 4. Metaphysics. I. Title. B765.T54M242 2006 210—dc22 2005027382 or Thomas DeKoninck F Contents Preface ix Part I. The Preambles of Faith 1. Introduction 3 Part Ii. The Erosion of the Doctrine Prologue 35 2. Gilson’s Attack on Cajetan 39 3. De Lubac and Cajetan 69 4. Christian Philosophy 91 5. The Chenu Case 108 6. The Alleged Forgetfulness of Esse 126 Part Iii. Thomism and Philosophical Theology Prologue 159 7. The Presuppositions of Metaphysics 169 8. The Science We Are Seeking 188 9. The Metaphysics as a Literary Whole 219 10. Methodological Interlude 238 11. The Book of Wisdom 245 12. Sed Contra 283 13. Aristotelian Existentialism and Thomistic Essentialism 293 Selected Bibliography 307 Index 311 Preface In Characters in Search of Their Author,1 I considered the difficulties posed for natural theology by various developments in recent philosophy. By and large, philosophers have become professionally hostile to the possibility of proving the existence of God and consequently of saying other true things about him. This hostility seems a predictable consequence of the subjective turn taken with Descartes and the various other turns taken since.2 In the present volume, by contrast with its predecessor, I propose to treat the nega- tive attitude toward natural theology that is found among those one would have expected to be defenders of it. This book is a defense of a robust understanding of the teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas and of the Magisterium on praeambula fidei. It is a cri- tique of several influential thinkers whose writings have, however unwitting- ly, eroded the notion of praeambula fidei. Finally, it is an oblique defense of Thomism as philosophy. The locus of the praeambula fidei is in metaphysics as Thomas learned that culminating science from Aristotle. It is only when that metaphysics is correctly understood that the praeambula fidei can be cor- rectly understood. Thomas added much to our understanding of these mat- ters, but what he added to is what is found in Book Lambda of the Metaphys- ics and the presuppositions on which it depends. Thomists who imagine an enmity between Thomas and Aristotle fail to see this, and accordingly would lead us along paths that end in something akin to fideism. 1. Characters in Search of Their Author, the Gifford Lectures Glasgow 1999-2000 (South Bend, Ind., 2001). 2. Cornelio Fabro’s magisterial Introduzione al ateismo moderno (Rome, 1964) finds in the Cartesian turn the seeds of modern atheism. ix
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