From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suárez influenced the modern philosophers and was
an early writer on
international law
Francisco Suárez (5 January 1548, Granada, Spain - 25 September 1617, Lisbon, Portugal) was a Spanish Jesuit priest, philosopher and theologian, one of the leading figures of the
School
of Salamanca movement, and generally regarded as having been
the greatest scholastic after Thomas
Aquinas.
Life and
career
At the age of sixteen Suarez entered the Society of
Jesus at Salamanca,
and he studied philosophy and theology there for five years from
1565 to 1570. It appears that he was not a promising student at
first; indeed, he nearly gave up his thoughts of study after twice
failing the entrance exam. After passing the exam at the third
attempt, however, things changed, and he completed his course of
study in philosophy with distinction, going on to study theology,
then to teach philosophy at Ávila and Segovia. He was ordained in 1572, and taught theology at
Ávila and Segovia (1575), Valladolid (1576), Rome (1580–85), Alcalá (1585–92), Salamanca (1592–97), and Coimbra (1597–1616).
He wrote on a wide variety of subjects, producing a vast amount
of work (his complete works in Latin amount to twenty-six volumes). Suárez
writings include treatises on law,
the relationship between church and state, metaphysics, and theology. He is considered the father of
international law and his Disputationes metaphysicae were
widely read in Europe during the seventeenth century.
Suárez was regarded during his lifetime as being the greatest
living philosopher and theologian, and given the nickname Doctor Eximius
et Pius; Pope Gregory XIII attended his first
lecture in Rome. Pope
Paul V invited him to refute the errors of James I of
England, and wished to retain him near his person, to profit by
his knowledge. Philip II of Spain sent him to the
University of Coimbra in order to
give it prestige, and when Suárez visited the University of Barcelona, the doctors of the university
went out to meet him wearing the insignia of their faculties.
After his death in Portugal (in either Lisbon or Coimbra) his reputation grew still greater, and
he had a direct influence on such leading philosophers as Hugo Grotius, René
Descartes, and Gottfried Leibniz.
In 1679 Pope Innocent XI publicly condemned
sixty-five casuist
propositions, taken chiefly from the writings of Escobar, Suárez and others,
mostly Jesuit, theologians as propositiones
laxorum moralistarum and forbade anyone to teach them under
penalty of excommunication[1].
Philosophical thought
His most important philosophical achievements were in
metaphysics and the philosophy of law. Suárez may be considered
almost the last eminent representative of scholasticism. He adhered to a moderate
form of Thomism and
developed metaphysics as a systematic enquiry.
Metaphysics
For Suárez, metaphysics was the science of real essences (and
existence); it was mostly concerned with real being rather than
conceptual being, and with immaterial rather than with material
being. He held (along with earlier scholastics) that essence and
existence are the same in the case of God (see ontological argument), but
disagreed with Aquinas and others that the essence and existence of
finite beings are really distinct. He argued that in fact they are
merely conceptually distinct: rather than being really
separable, they can only logically be conceived as separate.
On the vexed subject of universals, he endeavored to steer a middle
course between the realism of Duns Scotus and the nominalism of William of Occam.
His position is a little bit closer to nominalism than that of Thomas Aquinas.
Sometimes he is classified as a moderate nominalist, but
his admitting of objective precision (praecisio
obiectiva) ranks him with moderate realists. The only
veritable and real unity in the world of existences is the
individual; to assert that the universal exists separately ex
parte rei would be to reduce individuals to mere accidents of
one indivisible form. Suárez maintains that, though the humanity of
Socrates does not differ from that of Plato, yet they do not
constitute realiter one and the same humanity; there are
as many "formal unities" (in this case, humanities) as there are
individuals, and these individuals do not constitute a factual, but
only an essential or ideal unity ("ita ut plura individua, quae
dicuntur esse ejusdem naturae, non sint unum quid vera entitate
quae sit in rebus, sed solum fundamentaliter vel per intellectum").
The formal unity, however, is not an arbitrary creation of the
mind, but exists "in natura rei ante omnem operationem
intellectus."
His metaphysical work, giving a remarkable effort of
systematisation, is a real history of medieval thought, combining
the three schools available at that time: Thomism, Scotism and Nominalism. He is also a deep commentator of
Arabic or high medieval works. He enjoyed the reputation of being
the greatest metaphysician of his time. He thus founded a school of
his own, Suarezianism, the chief characteristic principles
of which are:
- the principle of individuation
by the proper concrete entity of beings
- the rejection of pure potentiality of matter
- the singular as the object of direct intellectual
cognition
- a distinctio rationis ratiocinatae between the essence
and the existence of created beings
- the possibility of spiritual substance only numerically
distinct from one another
- ambition for the hypostatic union as the sin of the fallen
angels
- the Incarnation of the Word, even if Adam had not sinned
- the solemnity of the vow only in ecclesiastical law
- the system of Congruism that modifies Molinism by the introduction of subjective
circumstances, as well as of place and of time, propitious to the
action of efficacious grace, and with predestination ante praevisa
merita
- the possibility of holding one and the same truth by both
science and faith
- the belief in Divine authority contained in an act of
faith
- the production of the body and blood of Christ by transubstantiation as constituting
the Eucharistic sacrifice
- the final grace of the Blessed Virgin Mary superior to
that of the angels and saints combined.
Suárez made an important classification of being in
Disputationes Metaphysicae (1597), which influenced the
further development of theology within Catholicism (his fellow
Jesuit Pedro da Fonseca having
a powerful effect on Protestant Scholastic thought in the 16th and
17th centuries). In the second part of the book, disputations
28-53, Suárez fixes the distinction between ens infinitum
(God) and ens finitum (created beings). The first division
of being is that between ens infinitum and ens
finitum. Instead of dividing being into infinite and finite,
it can also be divided into ens a se and ens ab
alio, i.e., being that is from itself and being that is from
another. A second distinction corresponding to this one:ens
necessarium and ens contingens, i.e., necessary being
and contingent being. Still another formulation of the distinction
is between ens per essentiam and ens per
participationem, i.e., being that exists by reason of its
essence and being that exists only by participation in a being that
exists on its own (eigentlich). A further distinction is
between ens increatum and ens creatum, i.e.,
uncreated being and created, or creaturely, being. A final
distinction is between being as actus purus and being as
ens potentiale, i.e., being as pure actuality and being as
potential being. Suárez decided in favor of the first
classification of the being into ens infinitum and ens
finitum as the most fundamental, in connection with which he
accords the other classifications their due.
Theology
In theology, Suárez attached himself to the doctrine of Luis
Molina, the celebrated Jesuit professor of Evora. Molina tried
to reconcile the doctrine of predestination with the freedom of the
human will and the predestarian teachings of the Dominicans by
saying that the predestination is consequent upon God's
foreknowledge of the free determination of man's will, which is
therefore in no way affected by the fact of such predestination.
Suárez endeavoured to reconcile this view with the more orthodox
doctrines of the efficacy of grace and special election,
maintaining that, though all share in an absolutely sufficient
grace, there is granted to the elect a grace which is so adapted to
their peculiar dispositions and circumstances that they infallibly,
though at the same time quite freely, yield themselves to its
influence. This mediatizing system was known by the name of
"congruism."
Philosophy of
law
Here Suárez' main importance stems probably from his work on natural law, and from
his arguments concerning positive law and the status of a monarch. In his extensive work
Tractatus de legibus ac deo legislatore (reprinted,
London, 1679) he is to some extent the precursor of Grotius and
Samuel Pufendorf, in making an important
distinction between natural law and international law, which he saw
as based on custom. Though his method is throughout scholastic, he
covers the same ground, and Grotius speaks of him in terms of high
respect. The fundamental position of the work is that all
legislative as well as all paternal power is derived from God, and
that the authority of every law resolves itself into His. Suárez
refutes the patriarchal theory of government and the divine right
of kings founded upon it---doctrines popular at that time in
England and to some extent on the Continent. He argued against the
sort of social-contract theory that became
dominant among early-modern political philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes and
John Locke, but some
of his thinking found echoes in the more liberal, Lockean contract
theorists.
Human beings, argued Suárez, have a natural social nature
bestowed upon them by God, and this includes the potential to make
laws. But when a political society is formed, the authority of the
state is not of divine but of human origin; therefore, its nature
is chosen by the people involved, and their natural legislative
power is given to the ruler.[2] Because
they gave this power, they have the right to take it back, to
revolt against a ruler — but only if the ruler behaves badly
towards them, and they're obliged to act moderately and justly. In
particular, the people must refrain from killing the ruler, no
matter how tyrannical he may have become. If a government is
imposed on people, on the other hand, they not only have the right
to defend themselves by revolting against it, they are entitled to
kill the tyrannical ruler.
In 1613, at the instigation of Pope Paul V, Suárez wrote a treatise
dedicated to the Christian princes of Europe, entitled Defensio
catholicae fidei contra anglicanae sectae errores. This was
directed against the oath of
allegiance which James I required from his subjects.
James (himself a considerable scholar and defender of the divine
right of kings) caused it to be burned by the common hangman, and
forbade its perusal under the 'severest penalties, complaining
bitterly at the same time to Philip III that he should harbour
in his dominions a declared enemy of the throne and majesty of
kings.
Works
The Disputationes Metaphysicae (1597) were published in
the Seventeenth Century by the Portugal Jesuits. In the Eighteen
Century, the Venice edition in 23 volumes in folio (1740-1757)
appeared, followed by the Parisian Vivès edition, 28 volumes
(1856-1861); in 1965 the Vivés edition of the Disputationes
Metaphysicae was reprinted by Georg Olms, Hildesheim. No
modern edition of Suárez's complete works is yet available.
Bibliography
- Smith, Gerard (ed). Jesuit thinkers of the
Renaissance. Milwaukee, 1939, pp.1–62.
- Fichter, Joseph H. Man of Spain: Francis Suarez. New
York: Macmillan, 1940.
- Wroblewski, Pawel P. Arystotelesowska nauka o
nieskonczonosci w metafizycznej reinterpretacji Francisco Suareza.
Zarys problematyki / Aristotelian doctrine of the Infinity in the
methaphysical reinterpretation of Francisco Suarez. An Outline of
Issues, in: Krzysztof Rzepkowski (ed.), Aemulatio &
Imitatio. Powrot pisarzy starozytnych w epoce renesansu / Aemulatio
& Imitatio. The Return of the Ancient Writers in the epoque of
the Renaissance, Warszawa: Instytut Filologii Klasycznej
Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego (Warsaw: Institute of Classical
Philology, University of Warsaw), 2009, pp. 87-100.
References
- ^
Kelly, J.N.D., The Oxford History of the Popes, Oxford University
Press, 1986. ISBN 0-19-282085-0
- ^
http://www.action.org - Francisco Suarez (1548 -
1617) - The Action Institute - Microsoft Internet Explorer
Sources and external
links