Preface
1. Life and Work
1.1 Early Years
1.2 A Young Scholar
1.3 Master of Theology
1.4 Back to Italy
1.5 A Second Term in Paris
1.6 Breakdown
2. Aquinas's Explanatory Framework: The Four Causes
2.1 Introducing the Four Causes
2.1.1 Matter and
Form
2.1.2 The Efficient Cause
2.1.3 The Final Cause
2.1.4 The Four Causes Reviewed and Briefly Illustrated
2.2 The Four Causes Developed and Articulated
2.2.1 Mutual Priority
2.2.2 Priority Among the Causes
2.2.3 Proximate and Non-Proximate Causes
2.2.4 Causal
Coincidence
2.2.5 Incidental Causes
2.3 Conclusions
3. Aquinas's Metaphysical Framework: Being and Essence
3.1 Beings and Essences
3.2 Material Substances
3.2.1 First Qualification
3.2.2 Second Qualification
3.2.3 Third Qualification
3.3 Immaterial
Substances
3.4 Substance and Accidents
3.5 Universals
3.5.1 Qualitative Sameness
3.5.2 Numerical Sameness
3.6 Conclusions
4. God's Existence and Nature
4.1 Our Knowledge of God
4.2 Phase One: God's Existence
4.2.1 The Proof from Motion
4.2.2 The Proof from
Degrees of Truth
4.3 Phase Two: God's Nature
4.3.1 Absolute Simplicity
4.3.2 From Intellect to Will
4.4 Understanding God's Attributes: Analogical Predication
4.5 Conclusions
5. The Order of the Universe
5.1 God's Power
5.1.1 Creation
5.1.2 Omnipotence and
Creation
5.1.3 The Beginning of the Universe
5.2 The Created Order
5.3 Providence
5.3.1 Conservation
5.3.2 Necessity and Freedom
5.4 Conclusions
6. The Human Soul and the Human Body
6.1 The Special Status of Human Beings
6.2 Soul as a Principle of Life
6.3
Souls and Bodies: Hylomorphism
6.4 Against Reductive Materialism
6.5 Against Platonism
6.6 A Difficult Intermediary
6.7 Soul as Subsistent
6.8 Where in the Body Is the Soul?
6.9 Conclusions
7. Sense and Intellect
7.1 The Nature of Cognition
7.2 The Cognitive
Powers
7.2.1 Sensation
7.2.2 The Immateriality of Cognition
7.2.3 An Argument for the Intellect's Immateriality
7.3 Cognitive Functions
7.3.1 The Objects of Intellect
7.3.2 Abstraction
7.3.3 Illumination
7.3.4 Concept Formation
7.4 Conclusions
8. The Goal of
Human Life
8.1 Introduction
8.2 That There Is a Human End
8.3 Happiness
8.4 What Happiness Is Not
8.5 What Happiness Is
8.6 The Beatific Vision
8.7 Conclusions
9. Ethics
9.1 Overview
9.2 Natural Law
9.2.1 Nature and Eternal Law
9.2.2 Natural
Inclinations
9.2.3 The Passions
9.3 Virtue
9.3.1 The Need for Virtue
9.3.2 The Perfection of Virtue
9.3.3 Prudence
9.4 Conclusions
Glossary
Catalog of Works
Index
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Christopher Shields received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Cornell University. Currently Shuster Professor of Philosophy and Concurrent Professor of Classics at the University of Notre Dame, he has also held permanent positions at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the University of
Oxford. In addition, he has held visiting posts at Cornell University, Yale University, St. Louis University, Stanford University, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and the Humboldt University of Berlin.
Robert Pasnau received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Cornell University, and has
taught at the University of Colorado Boulder since 1999. He is the editor of Oxford Studies in Medieval Philosophy and the Cambridge History of Medieval Philosophy and has published widely on both the history of philosophy and contemporary questions.