medieval-scholastic
npx skills add https://github.com/chrislemke/stoffy --skill medieval-scholastic
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Medieval Scholastic Philosophy Skill
Master the philosophical traditions of the medieval period (c. 500-1500 CE)âincluding Latin Scholasticism, Islamic falsafa, and Jewish philosophyâcharacterized by rigorous method, synthesis of faith and reason, and engagement with ancient sources.
Overview
Historical Development
LATE ANTIQUITY (c. 200-600)
âââ Augustine (354-430): Christian Platonism
âââ Boethius (480-524): Logic, consolation
âââ Pseudo-Dionysius: Negative theology
EARLY MEDIEVAL (c. 600-1100)
âââ Islamic Golden Age
â âââ Al-Kindi (801-873): First Islamic philosopher
â âââ Al-Farabi (872-950): Political philosophy
â âââ Avicenna (980-1037): Essence/existence
âââ Jewish Philosophy
â âââ Saadia Gaon (882-942)
âââ Latin West
âââ Eriugena (815-877)
âââ Anselm (1033-1109): Ontological argument
HIGH SCHOLASTICISM (c. 1100-1300)
âââ Islamic
â âââ Al-Ghazali (1058-1111): Critique of philosophy
â âââ Averroes (1126-1198): Aristotelian commentator
âââ Jewish
â âââ Maimonides (1138-1204): Guide for the Perplexed
âââ Latin
âââ Peter Abelard (1079-1142): Logic, ethics
âââ Albert the Great (1200-1280): Natural philosophy
âââ Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274): Synthesis
âââ Bonaventure (1221-1274): Franciscan theology
âââ Duns Scotus (1266-1308): Subtle Doctor
âââ William of Ockham (1287-1347): Nominalism
LATE MEDIEVAL (c. 1300-1500)
âââ Nominalism vs. Realism debate
âââ Via Moderna vs. Via Antiqua
âââ Renaissance transition
The Scholastic Method
The Quaestio (Disputed Question)
Structure:
QUAESTIO FORMAT
âââââââââââââââ
QUAERITUR: The question is asked
"Whether God exists?"
VIDETUR QUOD NON: It seems that not...
âââ Objection 1 (Sed contra)
âââ Objection 2
âââ Objection 3
SED CONTRA: On the contrary...
(Authority supporting the affirmative)
RESPONDEO DICENDUM: I answer that...
(The master's own position with arguments)
AD PRIMUM, AD SECUNDUM, AD TERTIUM...
(Replies to each objection)
Example (Aquinas, Summa Theologiae I, q.2, a.3):
WHETHER GOD EXISTS?
âââââââââââââââââââ
OBJECTION 1: It seems God does not exist, because if one
of two contraries be infinite, the other would be destroyed.
But "God" means infinite good. If God existed, there would
be no evil. But evil exists. Therefore God does not exist.
OBJECTION 2: What can be accomplished by fewer principles
is not produced by more. But all things can be explained by
other principles (nature, human reason). Therefore there is
no need to suppose God's existence.
SED CONTRA: Exodus 3:14 "I am who am."
RESPONDEO: God's existence can be proved in five ways...
AD 1: As Augustine says, God permits evil to bring good
from it. Infinite goodness can coexist with evil.
AD 2: Natural things and human acts presuppose God as
first cause...
Dialectical Method
Sic et Non (Abelard):
- Collect authorities on both sides of questions
- Show apparent contradictions
- Resolve through careful distinctions
- Reconcile where possible
Lectio (Commentary)
LECTIO METHOD
âââââââââââââ
1. DIVISIO TEXTUS
âââ Divide text into units
2. EXPOSITIO LITTERAE
âââ Explain literal meaning
3. EXPOSITIO SENSUUM
âââ Explain deeper meanings
4. DUBIA
âââ Raise difficulties
5. SOLUTIO
âââ Resolve difficulties
Key Figures and Ideas
Augustine (354-430)
Christian Platonism:
- Divine illumination: God illuminates the mind to know truth
- Evil as privation (absence of good, not positive reality)
- Original sin and grace
- City of God vs. City of Man
- Time as distension of the soul
The Problem of Evil:
AUGUSTINIAN THEODICY
ââââââââââââââââââââ
1. God is perfectly good and omnipotent
2. Evil exists
3. How?
SOLUTION:
âââ Evil is not a substance but privation (lack of good)
âââ God created beings with free will
âââ Free will makes moral good possible
âââ Free will also makes sin possible
âââ Natural evil: consequence of fallen world
âââ God permits evil for greater good
Anselm (1033-1109)
Ontological Argument (Proslogion):
ANSELM'S ARGUMENT
âââââââââââââââââ
1. God is "that than which nothing greater can be thought"
(id quo nihil maius cogitari possit)
2. Even the fool understands this concept
3. If God existed only in the understanding, something greater
could be thought (one that also exists in reality)
4. But then we could think of something greater than "that than
which nothing greater can be thought" â contradiction!
5. Therefore, God exists in reality as well as understanding
GAUNILO'S OBJECTION (The Perfect Island):
If this works, we could prove the existence of a perfect island.
ANSELM'S REPLY:
The argument works only for that than which nothing greater
can be thought, not for any "perfect" thing.
Avicenna (Ibn Sina, 980-1037)
Essence and Existence:
- In creatures, essence and existence are distinct
- Essence: what a thing is
- Existence: that a thing is
- Existence is added to essence (accidental in creatures)
- In God alone, essence = existence
The Flying Man:
AVICENNA'S FLYING MAN
âââââââââââââââââââââ
Imagine yourself created all at once, suspended in air,
with no sense experience (eyes covered, limbs spread,
floating in a void).
Would you be aware of your own existence?
AVICENNA: Yes. You would know you exist even without
perceiving any body.
CONCLUSION: The self is known directly, not through body.
Soul is distinct from body.
Averroes (Ibn Rushd, 1126-1198)
The Commentator: Definitive Aristotle interpretation
Controversial Doctrines:
- Eternity of the world (no temporal beginning)
- Unity of the intellect (one agent intellect for all humans)
- Double truth? (Philosophy and religion can contradict?)
The Tahafut Debate:
- Al-Ghazali: Tahafut al-Falasifa (Incoherence of the Philosophers)
- Averroes: Tahafut al-Tahafut (Incoherence of the Incoherence)
Maimonides (1138-1204)
Negative Theology:
- We cannot say what God is, only what God is not
- All positive attributes are metaphorical
- Divine simplicity: no composition in God
Guide for the Perplexed:
- Reconcile Torah with Aristotelian philosophy
- Allegorical interpretation of Scripture
- Demonstrates limits of human knowledge
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
The Five Ways (Summa Theologiae I, q.2, a.3):
QUINQUE VIAE (FIVE WAYS)
ââââââââââââââââââââââââ
1. MOTION (First Mover)
âââ Things are in motion
âââ Whatever is moved is moved by another
âââ Cannot regress to infinity
âââ Therefore: Unmoved Mover
2. EFFICIENT CAUSATION (First Cause)
âââ Things have efficient causes
âââ Nothing causes itself
âââ Cannot regress to infinity
âââ Therefore: First Efficient Cause
3. CONTINGENCY (Necessary Being)
âââ Things come into and go out of existence
âââ If everything were contingent, at some time nothing existed
âââ But then nothing would exist now
âââ Therefore: Necessary Being
4. GRADATION (Maximum)
âââ Things have degrees of perfection
âââ Degrees require a maximum (standard)
âââ Therefore: Maximum Being
5. DESIGN (Intelligent Designer)
âââ Natural things act for ends
âââ Unintelligent things cannot direct themselves to ends
âââ Therefore: Intelligent Director
Essence and Existence:
THOMISTIC METAPHYSICS
âââââââââââââââââââââ
IN CREATURES:
âââ Essence â Existence
âââ Essence limits existence
âââ Existence is received, participated
âââ Act/potency composition
IN GOD:
âââ Essence = Existence
âââ God IS His existence (ipsum esse subsistens)
âââ Pure Act, no potency
âââ Absolutely simple
Analogy:
- We cannot know God directly
- Univocal predication: same meaning (impossible for God)
- Equivocal predication: completely different meaning (uninformative)
- Analogical predication: proportional similarity (via eminentiae, via negationis, via causalitatis)
Duns Scotus (1266-1308)
Univocity of Being:
- “Being” applies in same sense to God and creatures
- Necessary for any knowledge of God
- Against Thomistic analogy
Formal Distinction:
- Intermediate between real and conceptual distinction
- Same thing, distinct formalities (e.g., divine attributes)
Haecceity (thisness):
- Principle of individuation
- What makes this thing THIS thing, not just a kind
- Beyond matter and form
William of Ockham (1287-1347)
Ockham’s Razor:
- Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem
- “Do not multiply entities beyond necessity”
- Parsimony principle
Nominalism:
UNIVERSALS DEBATE
âââââââââââââââââ
REALISM (Plato, Aquinas)
âââ Universals exist (ante rem or in re)
âââ "Humanity" is a real thing
âââ Grounds similarity of individuals
NOMINALISM (Ockham)
âââ Only individuals exist
âââ Universals are names/concepts
âââ Similar things: brute fact
âââ No real universal nature
Central Debates
Faith and Reason
Positions:
| Thinker | Position |
|---|---|
| Augustine | Faith seeking understanding |
| Anselm | I believe in order to understand |
| Aquinas | Reason can prove some truths; others require revelation |
| Averroes | Philosophy and religion have different domains |
| Al-Ghazali | Philosophy cannot prove essential religious truths |
The Problem of Universals
Three Main Views:
UNIVERSALS POSITIONS
ââââââââââââââââââââ
EXTREME REALISM (Plato)
âââ Universals exist independently (ante rem)
MODERATE REALISM (Aristotle, Aquinas)
âââ Universals exist in particulars (in re)
and in minds (post rem)
NOMINALISM (Ockham)
âââ Only particulars exist; universals are names
CONCEPTUALISM (Abelard)
âââ Universals are mental concepts, not mere names
Divine Simplicity
The Doctrine: God has no composition whatsoever
- No matter/form
- No essence/existence (in God, these are identical)
- No substance/accidents
- No genus/difference
- No potency/act
Problems:
- How can God have multiple attributes?
- How can God know particulars?
- How can God act in time?
Creation and Eternity
Question: Did the world have a temporal beginning?
Positions:
- Aristotle: World is eternal
- Averroes: Philosophy demonstrates eternity
- Al-Ghazali: Creation ex nihilo in time
- Aquinas: Reason cannot prove either; revelation tells us world began
- Bonaventure: An actual infinite is impossible; world must have begun
Key Vocabulary
Latin Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Quaestio | Question; the scholastic format |
| Disputatio | Disputation; formal debate |
| Summa | Summary; comprehensive treatise |
| Ens | Being |
| Essentia | Essence; what a thing is |
| Existentia | Existence; that a thing is |
| Substantia | Substance; that which exists in itself |
| Accidens | Accident; what exists in another |
| Actus | Act; actuality |
| Potentia | Potency; potentiality |
| Analogia | Analogy |
| Univocum | Univocal (same meaning) |
| Aequivocum | Equivocal (different meanings) |
| Suppositio | Supposition (reference of terms) |
| Forma | Form |
| Materia | Matter |
Arabic Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Falsafa | Philosophy (from Greek) |
| Kalam | Dialectical theology |
| Wujud | Existence |
| Mahiyya | Quiddity, essence |
| ‘Aql | Intellect |
| Nafs | Soul |
| DhÄt | Essence, self |
Integration with Repository
Related Thinkers
thinkers/aristotle/(key source)thinkers/plato/(via Augustine, Neoplatonism)
Related Themes
thoughts/existence/: Metaphysics, beingthoughts/knowledge/: Faith and reasonthoughts/morality/: Natural law ethics
Reference Files
methods.md: Quaestio, lectio, disputation protocolsvocabulary.md: Latin and Arabic term glossaryfigures.md: Major philosophers with key worksdebates.md: Central controversies in detailsources.md: Primary texts and scholarship