Clarke Person and Being
Clarke Person and Being
Clarke Person and Being
title:
Lecture ; 1993
author: Clarke, W. Norris.
publisher: Marquette University Press
isbn10 | asin: 0874621607
print isbn13: 9780874621600
ebook isbn13: 9780585168258
language: English
Agent (Philosophy) , Ontology,
subject Thomas,--Aquinas, Saint,-
-1225?-1274.
publication date: 1993
lcc: BD450.C563 1993eb
ddc: 126
Agent (Philosophy) , Ontology,
subject: Thomas,--Aquinas, Saint,-
-1225?-1274.
Page i
by
W. Norris Clarke, S.J.
Marquette University Press
Milwaukee
1993
Page ii
Prefatory
The Wisconsin-Alpha Chapter of Phi Sigma
Tau, the National Honor Society for
Philosophy at Marquette University, each year
invites a scholar to deliver a lecture in honor
of St. Thomas Aquinas.
The 1993 Aquinas Lecture, Person and
Being, was delivered in the Tony and Lucille
Weasler Auditorium of the Alumni Memorial
Union on Sunday, February 28, 1993, by the
Reverend W. Norris Clarke, S.J., Professor
Emeritus of Philosophy at Fordham
University, The Bronx, New York, and
Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Xavier
Unversity, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Fr. Clarke was born in New York City and
attended Georgetown University before
entering the Society of Jesus. He began his
study of philosophy at the Collège Saint Louis
on the Isle of Jersey and then earned an M.A.
in philosophy at Fordham University before
doing his theological studies at Woodstock
College, Woodstock, Maryland, and earning
his Ph.D. at the University of Louvain in 1950.
Fr. Clarke taught philosophy at Fordham
University from 1955 to 1985, becoming
professor of philosophy in 1968 and professor
emeritus in 1985. Since his retirement from
Fordham University, he has been visiting
professor at Santa Clara University, Villanova
University, Xavier University, Wheeling Jesuit
Page iv
Introduction
Many of you who will hear or read this
lecture are already familiar, I gather, with
some of my work on the metaphysics of St.
Thomas Aquinas (the themes of participation,
action, etc.). But in recent years I have been
focusing my attention more on the human
person in St. Thomas and its links with his
metaphysics of being. So I am delighted to be
offered this distinguished and widely
respected forum to gather together in one
place the ideas that I have been putting forth
piecemeal elsewhere.
My objective in this present lecture is to
present for your reflection and criticism what
I would call a "creative retrieval and
completion" of St. Thomas's own thought on
the metaphysics of the person, in particular
the human person. My own endeavour here is
actually part of a loose, ongoing cooperation
that has recently been developing among a
growing number of Thomistic thinkers, some
philosophers, some theologians, who feel the
need, as I do, to draw out and highlight a
dynamic and relational notion of person which
seems to us clearly implied in St. Thomas's
own metaphysics of being as existential act,
but
Page 2
2. Being as Relational
The innate dynamism of being as overflowing
into self-manifesting, self-communicating
action is clear and explicit in St. Thomas, if
one knows where to look. Not as explicit,
however, though necessarily implied, it seems
to me, is the corollary that relationality is a
primordial dimension of
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II.
Application to the Person
Let us now apply this dynamic, self-
communicative notion of being to the person,
specifically the human person. For St.
Thomas, the person is "that which is most
perfect in all of nature." 20 But it is not some
special mode of being, added on from the
outside, so to speak. It is really nothing but
the fullness of being itself, existence come
into its own, allowed to be fully what it is by
"nature" when not restricted by the limitations
proper to the material mode of being. In a
word, when being is allowed to be fully itself
as active presence, it ipso facto turns into
luminous self-presence and self-possession,
i.e., self-consciousness in the order of
knowledge and self-determination in the order
of action. But these are precisely the essential
attributes of person. To be fully, without
restriction, therefore, is to be personal.
1. The Meaning of Person
What does it mean, then, precisely, to be a
person for St. Thomas? We cannot enter here
into the long and fascinating history of how
the meaning of "person" developed and
became distinct.21 The distinction developed
partly as a social and legal term in Roman
law, where "person" meant a human being
with full legal
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Conclusion
We have now come to the end of our journey
of exploration of the profound links between
person and being for St. Thomas. Profoundly
inspired by Thomas's own explicit
metaphysics of being and the person, and
gratefully stimulated by the rich contemporary
analyses of the relationality and interpersonal
aspects of human life, plus recent theological
speculation on the immensely illuminating
implications of the Christian revelation of God
as Trinity, we have attempted a ''creative
completion'' of St. Thomas's own work. This
has been carried out partly by bringing
together various parts of his thought which he
himself did not explicitly link up but which
seem to me clearly implicit in the dynamism
of his thought and just waiting to be done,
although he himself, by historical chance, did
not get around to doing so. Occasionally, but
rarely, we have gone beyond what he himself
seems even implicitly to have thought, but I
believe lies inevitably within the dynamism of
his own inexhaustibly rich metaphysics of
existential. being (esse) as expansive act.
Page 111
Notes
1. Cf. the interesting article by Robert
Connor, "Relation, the Thomistic Esse, and
American Culture: Toward a Metaphysic of
Sanctity," Communio 17 (1990), 455-64, and
other pieces in the same issue.
2. Josef Ratzinger, Introduction to
Christianity (New York: Herder & Herder,
1970), pp. 132, 137; also the longer
development in "Concerning the Notion of
Person in Theology," Communio 17 (1990),
438-54.
3. W. Norris Clarke, "Action as the Self-
Revelation of Being: A Central Theme in the
Thought of St. Thomas," in Linus Thro, ed.
History of Philosophy in the Making
(Lantham, MD: University Press of America,
1982), pp. 63-80.
4. Summa contra Gentes I, ch. 43.
5. Summa contra Gentes II, ch. 7.
6. De potentia q. 2, art. 1.
7. Summa contra Gentes III, ch. 64.
8. Summa Theologiae I, q. 19, art. 2.
9. Summa Theologiae I, q. 105, art. 5.
10. Summa contra Gentes III, ch. 113.
11. Etienne Gilson, Being and Some
Philosophers (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of
Mediaeval Studies, 1952), p. 184.
12. Gerald Phelan, "The Existentialism of St.
Thomas," Selected Papers (Toronto:
Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
1967), p. 77.
13. Jacques Maritain, Existence and the
Existent (Garden City: Doubleday, 1957), p.
90.
Page 116