Thursday, December 7, 2006

Medieval Notes, Including John Scotus

(Originally written December 7, 2006 in Book 11)

The History of Philosophy vol. 2

Chapter 5 - The Medieval Interval

Plato and Aristotle dominated the Classical period. Augustine and Aquinas dominated the Medieval period; but, lived 8 centuries apart. Augustine and Aquinas dealt with different problems, whereas Plato and Aristotle dealt with the same problems.

The Dark Ages

The barbarian conquering of Rome caused enormous stress. The barbarians were incapable of sustaining such a complex culture like Rome's.

The collapse of a uniform society caused man to primarily focus on staying alive.

The Classical philosophy was lost to Europe in the Dark Ages.

Literacy declined to the point that Charlemagne complained that the clergy did not know enough Latin to interpret the Scriptures.

The Church

Anything surviving from the Roman World in the Dark Ages was due to the Church.

Christianity made converts out of the pagan and Arian barbarians.

"By the end of the Dark Ages, Christianity was more widely spread and Orthodoxy more firmly entrenched than before the barbarian invasions began" (Jones, 142).

The Rise of the Papacy

The early Church was ruled by bishops, not by the Pope.

The doctrine of Papal primacy made the Pope the head of the Church and gave it temporal authority.

A Christian king was subject to the Pope.

Pope Gregory VII in the 11th century pulled papal primacy to its extreme. The power of the Popes stopped Europe from instituting a unified government until the rise of nationalism in the early Modern period.

Monasticism

While the Papacy drove the Church to become a secular power, the spiritual nature was preserved by two things:
1) Monasticism
2) The Friars

Monasticism began in the 5th and 6th centuries A.D.

Monasticism got its credibility from St. Benedict.

Humility was the top virtue in monastic life.

The monastic movement constantly reformed to maintain a spiritual primacy over a temporal primacy. Though it wasn't perfect it worked well enough.

The Friars of St. Francis

Francis of Assisi (1182-1226)

Francis of Assisi was a mystic reformer and founded the Order of the Friars Minor.

He was dedicated to poverty, simplicity and good works.

He achieved a large measure of success in inflaming the hearts of the average man with the love of God.

The main difference between now and the Dark Ages is that men in the Dark Ages were ready at any moment to be touched by the otherworldly.

Feudalism

Particularism began to grow in the fragmented ruins of the old Empire.

Men with property gained power as central governments were too weak to perform duties.

"Immunity" was granted to land owners by the central government which gave them the power of controlling their lands with no government interference.

Small peasant farmers would "commend" their lands to these large land owners. "Commendation" was the act of giving up one's land for protection and security. The ones who commended their lands would live on them and work them still, but they would no longer own the land.

Charlemagne (742-814) organized a strong central government and was crowned Emperor by the Pope. But his kingdom collapsed shortly after his death.

Feudalism was born out of the rapid commending process that followed the collapse of Charlemagne.

Authority and power and administration became inextricable from land ownership.

Medieval society was dominated by the concept of status, not the concept of citizenship.

The Middle Ages had a very fragmented society.

Chivalry

Chivalry was an ideal that emphasized private honor and public service.

Along with the Church and feudalism Chivalry marked the culture of the Middle Ages.

St. Louis, King of France

Louis IX was born in 1214 and set out to recapture Jerusalem in 1248. It failed, but he tried again in 1270.

Louis IX described chivalry as "upright" and "worthy".

Uprightness involved courage, modesty, charitableness, sobriety, faithfulness and justice.

Louis IX saw sin as a disease, much like Augustine.

Louis IX did not extend his notions of charity and humility to the Jews.

Louis IX distrusted education. As St. Francis, Louis IX was satisfied with simple faith.

Louis IX saw outward dignity as vital in society. His count was elaborate and attendants were lavishly dressed to show their rank.

Feudalism was so deeply entrenched in Louis IX's society that his closest friend and biographer, Sire de Joinville would not swear an oath of allegiance to Louis' family in the event he died in Crusade because Joinville was not his liegeman.

Art and Letters

Architecture

The 12th and 13th centuries were a period of great artistic blossoming.

Vaulted circling and stained glass windows marked the new Gothic style. The abbey church of St. Denis, the Cathedral of Noyon, Enlis, Paris, Rheims and the Sainte Chapelle are perfect examples of the Gothic style. The architecture reflected Christian piety.

Painting and Poetry

Painting and poetry moved from static, unmoving depictions to depictions of living, breathing men in nature.

It focused on the world, but their was still an otherworldly element: case in point - Dante.

The chasm between the otherworld and this world was removed. The two worlds were no longer bitter hostiles at war with each other.

Science

Bartholomew the Englishmen

Bartholomew was one of the most popular science writers of the Middle Ages.

He used Aristotle only in a way to describe it in a very confusing manner.

Science was mixed with heresy and old wives tales.

Aristotle and Medieval Science

It took time to assimilate Aristotle to science.

Men in the Middle Ages were more concerned with salvation, not with accumulating the facts.

Vincent Beauvais

Bartholomew and Vincent Beauvais were very unscientific.

The Universities

Some monastic and cathedral schools popped up after Charlemagne's renaissance.

The Universities slowly arose over Europe to satisfy the new hunger for knowledge slowly awakened over the 8th-11th centuries.

Philosophy during the Medieval Interval

The cultural problem for the 13th century philosopher was to find a place for these this-worldly ends in a scheme of life that still had a basically otherworldly orientation. The success of Aquinas lies in solving this central problem.

There was virtually no philosophical development in the 8 centuries between Augustine and Aquinas, save for Boethius, Isidore of Seville and John Scotus Erigena.

John Scotus Erigena

John Scotus Erigena (ca. 810-877) was born in Ireland. He studied Greek in an Irish monastery at a time when Greek was nearly lost in all the west.

He travels to France in 847 and taught at Paris in the palace school that Charlemagne founded.

He was involved in deep theological topics like Free Will and the Eucharist. He avoided the extreme forms of predestination, but went too far and was condemned as a Pealagian. His views were condemned in 855. Then his views on the Eucharist were condemned (he denied the Doctrine of Transubstantiation)

He decided to take a safer task of translating Greek into Latin.

John Scotus Erigena was deeply concerned with synthesis. As a Christian, Erigena must have a synthesis, an overarching philosophy that fit with the Catholic dogma.

Nature

John began with the nature of reality.

He believed that things fall into two classes:
1) Things that are
2) Things that are not

Things that are not have different modes, they are modes of non-being
1) Sinful man
2) Changing particulars
3) Potential being
4) Things that are "beyond our intellect"

Things that are are those things that we can comprehend.

John Scotus Erigena's divisions are influence by Plato (most of the texts he translated were neoplatonic ones)

Like Plato and the Neoplatonists, John identified the form of the Good with God.

God

According to John, God is "beyond being" and thus, not to be. John had a problem in attempting to reconcile Neoplatonic metaphysics and Christian dogma.

John held that there were two ways for finite minds to approach God:
1) An affirmative way
2) A negative way

The affirmative way consists of stating things like God is being, God is good, etc. These assertions are neither wholly true nor wholly false.

Every positive or affirmative statement about God must be supplemented by a negative statement.

Instead of stating the negative and positive about God as "God is being and not-being" he stated then like "God is super being"

John Scotus Erigena believed that God was truly Good, but to say that God was good was misleading because it wasn't the whole truth.

Creation

John Scotus Erigena started with a paradox in dealing with creation. If God made the world He must move, but how can He who is immutable move?

John asserted that the concepts of making and creation (like the concepts of being and goodness) applied to God in only a metaphorical sense.

He also asserted that the transcendence of the the Creator and the dependence of the creature (Two vitally important Church doctrines) were contradictory.

Theophanies

John held the world to be a "theophany" of God (an appearance of God). It is not an illusion, but the chosen method of God to reveal Himself to man. Human minds are a part of this theophany and thus their understanding is a part of God's theophany.

Knowledge is Illumination

"Everything that exists is an aspect of the divine nature reflected from some perspective or other" (Jones, 179).

Knowledge is fundamentally an act of grace by God in which He illumines our mind.

Four-Fold Division of Nature

While nature is truly one and beyond being, the human mind divides and classifies as was God's intention. There are four divisions of nature:
1) God - the nature that creates and is uncreated
2) The Platonic archetypes - the nature that creates and is created
3) The Physical World - the nature that does not create and is created
4) God - The nature that does not create and is not created

"God issues into the world and returns from it to Himself" (Jones, 180).

God is not conscious until he creates His mind. The archetypes are the divine images of God. They do not exist independently. They are the divine mind.

The archetypes (primordial causes) are the sources of the essences of the particulars in the physical world.

The primordial causes are: goodness, being, life, wisdom, truth, intelligence, reason, virtue, justice, health, greatness, omnipotence, eternity and peace. While we view them as a plurality, they are really a unity.

Anything that exists in the physical world that is describable as one of these primordial causes is so because it takes part (a finite part) in them.

The physical world has being by participating in the various primordial substances.

Is John's view Christian?

There are some Neoplatonic interpretations of nature that readily fit within the framework of Catholic Christianity.

John's metaphysics is a rational system, but is in danger of collapsing into subjectivism and mysticism.

The mystic elements were too strong for a Christian standard at his time. A private mystical basis was not the solution the Church as an institution was looking for.

John's fourth level (not-created and non-creating) seems to destroy individuality. Man's eternal salvation is done through a return to God by all souls. It is not exactly Kosher with the Church. It is blasphemy and heresy.

John's neoplatonism also renders sin and evil as unreal.

John also had to interpret the Scriptures rather loosely.

He also used the writings of St. Dionysius the Areopagite as an almost canonical authority. Unfortunately, St. Dionysius the Areopagite was later shown to be a fake.

The Neoplatonic Problem

Neoplatonic metaphysics and Christian Dogma are antagonistic. The problem was to include some deeply entrenched Neoplatonic ideals of the Middle Ages into Christianity.

The Controversy over Universals

The thinkers of the 11th century were logicians, not metaphysicians. They focused their energy on two very technical problems:
1) The status of universals
2) the relation between the spheres of faith and reason

It was desirable, if only for pragmatic reasons, to prove the Christian truths.

Reason was an indispensable weapon agains infidels and heretics.

Men of the Middle Ages basically agreed there were three modes of cognition
1) Revelation
2) Reason
3) Perception

The problem of universals and the scope of faith and reason was (and is) an interrelated problem.

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