SUBSTANCE AND ESSENCE, BETWEEN ARISTOTLE AND THOMAS AQUINAS Cover Image
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SUBSTANCE ET ESSENCE, ENTRE ARISTOTE ET THOMAS D’AQUIN
SUBSTANCE AND ESSENCE, BETWEEN ARISTOTLE AND THOMAS AQUINAS

Author(s): Enrico Berti
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Metaphysics, Philosophy of Middle Ages, 13th to 14th Centuries, Theory of Literature, Italian literature
Published by: EDITURA POLIROM S.A.
Keywords: Thomas Aquinas; Aristotle; Substance and essence;

Summary/Abstract: The article shows that Thomas Aquinas in many of his works (De ente et essentia, Summa theologiae, Sententia in Aristotelis Metaphysicam) interprets the passage Aristot. Metaph. II 1, 993 19‑31, as expounding a theory of degrees of truth and of being, which is not the true Aristotelian doctrine. This is due to the fact that he interprets «the eternal things», mentioned by Aristotle in that passage, as the heavenly bodies, and their principles as the unmoved movers, while Aristotle is speaking of the eternal truths, i.e. the truths of scientific knowledge, and of their principles, which are the axioms. The origin of Thomas’ interpretation is the commentary by Alexander of Aphrodisias, which Thomas knew via Averroes.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 18-19
  • Page Range: 351-368
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: French
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