Loving Oneself for Whose Sake? A Thomistic Response to Dietrich von Hildebrand Cover Image

Loving Oneself for Whose Sake? A Thomistic Response to Dietrich von Hildebrand
Loving Oneself for Whose Sake? A Thomistic Response to Dietrich von Hildebrand

Author(s): Anthony T. Flood
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: International Étienne Gilson Society
Keywords: Thomas Aquinas; Dietrich von Hildebrand; love; value-response; transcendence; self-love

Summary/Abstract: One might wonder whether the essence of love involves self-transcendence. If it does, then philosophers who speak of self-love could not really be addressing love at all. Perhaps they address a related phenomenon, maybe even a good, positive reality, but not love itself. Since St. Thomas Aquinas speaks to the legitimacy of the love of self, philosophers who argue the essence of love involves self-transcendence criticize the scholastic’s position. This is the exact criticism Dietrich von Hildebrand advances in The Nature of Love. This paper defends Aquinas against von Hildebrand’s suggestion that “self-love” is not really love at all. I will argue that, based on both natural and supernatural principles, Aquinas’s notion of the love of self, as far as it relates to the love of God, involves transcendence.

  • Issue Year: 12/2023
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 657-683
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: English
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