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Leo XIII and the Rise of Neo-Thomism


This Element examines the historical context and intellectual implications of the Thomistic revival inaugurated by Pope Leo XIII's encyclical Aeterni Patris, pursuing two principal objectives.
Valfredo Maria Rossi
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Thomism and the Natural Sciences


This Element argues for a novel approach to the sciences within Thomism, namely, science-engaged Thomism, which, aligned with the recent science-engaged theology movement, asks theological and metaphysical questions that require the input of the natural ...
Ignacio Silva
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Thomism

2018
Deriving from Thomas Aquinas in the thirteenth century, Thomism is a body of philosophical and theological ideas that seeks to articulate the intellectual content of Catholic Christianity. In its nineteenth and twentieth-century revivals Thomism has often characterized itself as the ‘perennial philosophy’.
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Neo-Thomism and Education

British Journal of Educational Studies, 1958
(1958). Neo‐Thomism and education. British Journal of Educational Studies: Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 27-35.
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Le thomisme

Revue d'histoire de l'Église de France, 1942
Combes André. Le thomisme. In: Revue d'histoire de l'Église de France, tome 28, n°113, 1942. pp. 65-74.
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Analytical Thomism

Monist, 1997
En guise d'introduction au dossier consacre au thomisme analytique («The Monist», 1997, 80, 4), l'A. retrace l'histoire de la formation et de la reception d'une pensee metaphysique, theologique, ethique et politique qui reconcilie l'heritage du platonisme augustinien avec la redecouverte de l'aristotelisme par ses sources arabes.
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Transcendental Thomisms

2016
This chapter locates those known as ‘trasncendental Thomists’ against the broad background, first, of the revival of Thomism in the late nineteenth century and, second, of debates concerning the relationship between faith and reason in Catholic circles since the late eighteenth century. The chapter then explores how Pierre Rousselot and Joseph Maréchal
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Thomism and Atheism

New Blackfriars, 2011
AbstractAtheism, the thesis that God does not exist and Thomism, the thesis that there are “proofs” for the existence of God based on experience and reason can be juxtaposed to each other as two extremes. On the other hand, the very statement of each implies the need to consider the other, so that the atheist and the Thomist both claim to belong to ...
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