Saturday, March 29, 2008

More on Aquinas and just laws

This is a good essay by Dr. Esolen. I am confirmed in my suspicion that I oversimplified the purpose of law last Wednesday.

5 comments:

MagistraCarminum said...

Take a little caution... Thomists believe man can exercise reason perfectly even after the fall, since it is not "fallen". It can interfere with a little thing I call depravity... and bverything man touches since the fall, even the way he fools himself about reasoning...
:-)

Pinon Coffee said...

I promise not to fall headlong into Thomism. Don't worry. :-) Or into Esolenism either, as far as that goes.

Yes, sin is an important doctrine, isn't it? :-)

But I like Aquinas and Esolen both, in general. Hence the links.

V-Dawg said...

Regardless of St. Thomas' view of human reason (and it is described correctly here), we can examine his arguments about law for truth or falsity independent of that--unless of course one believes the Fall destroys human reason, in which case one can't argue about anything at all. I think (imperfectly) that St. Thomas has made good use of his imperfect reason to lay out a solid Christian understanding of law. I am not expert enough on the subject in general to say whether his view is perfect, but I do not see flaws in it.

Rebecca said...

But then again, oversimplification might not be terrible, seeing as we only had 40 minutes to present all 6 of the WV's take on law. Sometimes oversimplification can make something graspable. Just so long as we didn't teach something false...

Anonymous said...

Good words.