
Subordinated Ethics
Natural Law and Moral Miscellany in Aquinas and Dostoyevsky
Caitlin Smith Gilson(Author)
Wipf & Stock Publishers
Published on 21. August 2020
Book
Hardback
398 pages
978-1-5326-8640-5 (ISBN)
Description
With Dostoyevsky's Idiot and Aquinas' Dumb Ox as guides, this book seeks to recover the elemental mystery of the natural law, a law revealed only in wonder. If ethics is to guide us along the way, it must recover its subordination; description must precede prescription. If ethics is to invite us along the way, it cannot lead, either as politburo, or even as public orthodoxy. It cannot be smugly symbolic but must be by way of signage, of directionality, of the open realization that ethical meaning is en route, pointing the way because it is within the way, as only sign, not symbol, can point to the sacramental terminus. The courtesies of dogma and tradition are the road signs and guideposts along the longior via, not themselves the termini. We seek the dialogic heart of the natural law through two seemingly contradictory voices and approaches: St. Thomas Aquinas and his famous five ways, and Fyodor Dostoyevsky's holy idiot, Prince Myshkin. It is precisely the apparent miscellany of these selected voices that provide us with a connatural invitation into the natural law as subordinated, as descriptive guide, not as prescriptive leader.
More details
Series
38
Language
English
Place of publication
Eugene
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
With dust jacket
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
798 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5326-8640-5 (9781532686405)
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Other editions
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E-Book
08/2020
Wipf and Stock Publishers
€46.99
Available for download
Persons
Caitlin Smith Gilson is professor of philosophy, St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary, Florida, and visiting professor of philosophy at Pontificia Universita della Santa Croce, in Rome, Italy. She is associate editor of The New Ressourcement Journal through Word on Fire Academic.