The present article focuses on the idea that divine nature is prior to being. This idea was first articulated in John of Scythopolis’s commentary on Pseudo-Dionysius. It was adopted by Maximus Confessor and re-used in Meister Eckhart’s first Quaestio Parisiensis. The main tenet of this idea is that, if God is the origin of being, he must be more fundamental than being. Thus, being cannot be identical to divine nature. The conclusion that can be drawn from the discussion of this idea is that the importance that has been traditionally attached to the "Exodusmetaphysik" must be reconsidered, and that the pre-ontological conception of divine nature constitutes an autonomous tradition in Christian thought
Special Collection: Theology and Nature, sub-edited by Johan Buitendag (University of Pretoria). Th...
In this paper I pursue an avenue of argument implicit in Patristic thinkers — such as Tertullian and...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...
The present article focuses on the idea that divine nature is prior to being. This idea was first ar...
The medieval theological worldview was a synthesis of grace and nature that allowed theology and sci...
In this paper, I discuss Meister Eckhart’s approach to natural theology and specifically to the ques...
Earthly reality and its substance in God: An attempt of reinterpreting the transcendental metaphysic...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
With this article, the author argues that in reality nothing is or isn’t itself, that everything is ...
The doctrine of creation and the knowledge of nature have come into tension in modernity. Against th...
Setting out from an ordering of the basic metaphysical thought of St. Thomas, an ordering, the roots...
The notion of God as immutable has received severe critiqueduring the last centuries. Critics claim ...
The doctrine of creation and the knowledge of nature have come into tension in modernity. Against t...
Original Research: Volume 17 in the South African Science and Religion Forum Series, edited by Prof....
In the article, the contemporary lack of representation of the axiom “grace presumes nature” is reco...
Special Collection: Theology and Nature, sub-edited by Johan Buitendag (University of Pretoria). Th...
In this paper I pursue an avenue of argument implicit in Patristic thinkers — such as Tertullian and...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...
The present article focuses on the idea that divine nature is prior to being. This idea was first ar...
The medieval theological worldview was a synthesis of grace and nature that allowed theology and sci...
In this paper, I discuss Meister Eckhart’s approach to natural theology and specifically to the ques...
Earthly reality and its substance in God: An attempt of reinterpreting the transcendental metaphysic...
Post-Tridentine Western Christian theology introduced the notion of natura pura, which holds that on...
With this article, the author argues that in reality nothing is or isn’t itself, that everything is ...
The doctrine of creation and the knowledge of nature have come into tension in modernity. Against th...
Setting out from an ordering of the basic metaphysical thought of St. Thomas, an ordering, the roots...
The notion of God as immutable has received severe critiqueduring the last centuries. Critics claim ...
The doctrine of creation and the knowledge of nature have come into tension in modernity. Against t...
Original Research: Volume 17 in the South African Science and Religion Forum Series, edited by Prof....
In the article, the contemporary lack of representation of the axiom “grace presumes nature” is reco...
Special Collection: Theology and Nature, sub-edited by Johan Buitendag (University of Pretoria). Th...
In this paper I pursue an avenue of argument implicit in Patristic thinkers — such as Tertullian and...
This text aims to show that the core of human divinity according to Aristotle is exercising the divi...