Christology and the ‘Scotist Rupture’
Ładowanie...
Data
2013
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
The Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow
Abstrakt
This essay engages the debate concerning the so-called ‘Scotist rupture’ from the point of view of Christology. The essay investigates John Duns Scotus’s development of Christological doctrine against the strong Cyrilline tendencies of Thomas Aquinas. In particular the essay explores how Scotus’s innovative doctrine of the ‘haecceity’ of Christ’s human nature entailed a self-sufficing conception of the ‘person’, having to do less with the mystery of rationality and ‘communion’, and more to do with a quasi-voluntaristic ‘power’ over oneself. In this light, Scotus’s Christological development is read as suggestively contributing to make possible a proto-liberal condition in which ‘agency’ (agere) and ‘right’ (ius) are construed as determinative of what it means to be and act as a person.
Opis
Słowa kluczowe
John Duns Scotus, Scotism, Scotist rupture, Thomas Aquinas, homo assumptus Christology, Christology, person, Jan Duns Szkot, szkotyzm, rozłam szkotystyczny, Tomasz z Akwinu, chrystologia, osoba, teologia, theology, doktorzy Kościoła
Cytowanie
Theological Research, 2013, Vol. 1, s. 31-63.
Licencja
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland