Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account

Thomas Aquinas is celebrated for many things in the history of Christian theology, but one is the revolutionary place he gives to the thesis that Christ acquired knowledge by way of empirical experience. That his claim should be so revolutionary strikes us today as odd. Any reflection on Christ’s kn...

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Main Author: Gaine, S
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2015
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author Gaine, S
author_facet Gaine, S
author_sort Gaine, S
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description Thomas Aquinas is celebrated for many things in the history of Christian theology, but one is the revolutionary place he gives to the thesis that Christ acquired knowledge by way of empirical experience. That his claim should be so revolutionary strikes us today as odd. Any reflection on Christ’s knowledge ordinarily begins today by stressing how the Word of God assumed our ordinary human limited ways of knowing. In medieval times, however, theologians found it extremely difficult to accept that Christ acquired knowledge by the normal empirical, experiential route. A crucial role in Aquinas’s theological advance beyond this position was played by his philosophical commitments, within the wider context of the soteriological character of his Christology. However, there are problems involved in Aquinas’s particular theological position on Christ’s acquired knowledge and his wider picture of Christ’s knowledge. The same philosophical means that enabled Aquinas to recognise the reality of Christ’s acquiring knowledge also led him into an overall picture of the perfection of Christ’s knowledge that was not so satisfactory. Part of the solution to the difficulties into which Aquinas gets himself can be found in a philosophical position already employed by him in his mature account of Christ’s knowledge.
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spelling oxford-uuid:3a27299d-bddf-4afd-9d0f-09c1a49640e22022-03-26T13:59:51ZChrist’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his accountJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3a27299d-bddf-4afd-9d0f-09c1a49640e2Symplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2015Gaine, SThomas Aquinas is celebrated for many things in the history of Christian theology, but one is the revolutionary place he gives to the thesis that Christ acquired knowledge by way of empirical experience. That his claim should be so revolutionary strikes us today as odd. Any reflection on Christ’s knowledge ordinarily begins today by stressing how the Word of God assumed our ordinary human limited ways of knowing. In medieval times, however, theologians found it extremely difficult to accept that Christ acquired knowledge by the normal empirical, experiential route. A crucial role in Aquinas’s theological advance beyond this position was played by his philosophical commitments, within the wider context of the soteriological character of his Christology. However, there are problems involved in Aquinas’s particular theological position on Christ’s acquired knowledge and his wider picture of Christ’s knowledge. The same philosophical means that enabled Aquinas to recognise the reality of Christ’s acquiring knowledge also led him into an overall picture of the perfection of Christ’s knowledge that was not so satisfactory. Part of the solution to the difficulties into which Aquinas gets himself can be found in a philosophical position already employed by him in his mature account of Christ’s knowledge.
spellingShingle Gaine, S
Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title_full Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title_fullStr Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title_full_unstemmed Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title_short Christ’s acquired knowledge according to Thomas Aquinas: how Aquinas’s philosophy helped and hindered his account
title_sort christ s acquired knowledge according to thomas aquinas how aquinas s philosophy helped and hindered his account
work_keys_str_mv AT gaines christsacquiredknowledgeaccordingtothomasaquinashowaquinassphilosophyhelpedandhinderedhisaccount