Natural and Political Conceptions of Community : the Role of the Household Society in Early Modern Jesuit Thought, C. 1590-1650.
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Online Access: |
Full Text (via ProQuest) |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Boston :
BRILL,
2019.
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Series: | Jesuit studies (Leiden, Netherlands) ;
v. 17. |
Table of Contents:
- Intro; Natural and Political Conceptions of Community: The Role of the Household Society in Early Modern Jesuit Thought, c.1590-1650; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1 Theology and Philosophy: Status; 1 Introduction; 2 The Scholastic Terminology in Aquinas, the Council of Trent, and Domingo de Soto; 3 The Scotist and Thomistic Accounts of Original Justice; 4 Suárez's De gratia and Connaturality; 5 Pure Nature; 6 The Disagreement among the Jesuits on the State of Innocence; 7 The Jesuits on the Natural End: God's Liberty and Liberality; 8 Conclusion: The Theology of Nature.
- 2 Aristotle and the Christian Account of Household and Politics1 Introduction; 2 Aristotle on oikos and polis; 3 Thomism between Aristotle and Augustine; 4 The Common Good in Early Modern Scholastic Thought; 5 The Origin of Public Power; 6 Status Theology and the Distinction between Household and Politics; 7 Community before Sin; 8 Arriaga's Intervention; 9 Conclusion: Household, Politics, and the Natural End; 3 The Origins of dominium; 1 Introduction; 2 Natural and Moral dominium in Jesuit status Theology; 3 Husband and Wife in the State of Innocence.
- 4 The Origins of dominium under the ius gentium: (1) The Dominicans5 The Origins of dominium under the ius gentium: (2) The Jesuits; 6 Conclusion: Dominion in the Transition to the Postlapsarian World; 4 Marriage and Political Virtue; 1 Introduction; 2 Oikos and polis in Aristotle's Thought; 3 The Theology of the Marital Common Good; 4 Aquinas on the Marital Good and Politics; 5 Marital and Political Friendship in Early Modern Scholastic Thought; 6 Marriage and status: Indissolubility; 7 Conclusion: Virtue in Marriage and in the civitas; 5 Justice and Right in Oeconomic and Political Life.
- 1 Introduction2 Aristotle's Universal Justice; 3 Thomistic Legal Justice; 4 The Early Modern Scholastics on Legal Justice as General Justice; 5 Legal Justice as the Specific Citizen Virtue; 6 Two Jesuit Perspectives on Oeconomic Justice; 7 Valencia and Tanner on Alterity; 8 Valencia and Tanner on Equality; 9 Patria versus respublica; 10 Conclusion: Resemblances to Political Relations of Virtue and Right; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.