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Thomistic Considerations: Themes in Aquinas, Aristotle, Augustine, Dante and Eliot

by Kevin White
Studies in philosophy and the history of philosopy ;
Catholic University of America Press, 2026
Cloth: 978-0-8132-4098-5, eISBN: 978-0-8132-4099-2

ABOUT THIS BOOK
This collection of essays considers a variety of themes in philosophy, theology, and poetry, three ways of thinking that share a certain openness and comprehensiveness. The essays show how philosophy, theology, and poetry are ways of thinking in the medium of words—in large part in the medium of written words—against the background of all things and from the point of view of all of human life. As the essays make clear, philosophy, theology, and poetry are special ways of thinking and speaking, but they are the contrary of specializations.

Many of the themes are perennial preoccupations in philosophy: being, time, number, friendship, pleasure, purpose, choice, reason, and order. Others are particular concerns of theology and poetry, such as the divine presence and absence in the world, and poetic form.

The volume is divided into two parts: a first part consisting of eight essays on themes in Aquinas’s work, and a second part consisting of five essays on other authors whose thought, in one way or another, has an affinity with the thought of Aquinas: Aristotle, Augustine, Anselm, Dante, T. S. Eliot, and Robert Sokolowski. The volume’s title pays homage to Aquinas’s use of the Latin word consideratio, a favorite term of the scholastics that could refer to any careful attending to what one knows. The essays illustrate ways in which considerations undertaken in philosophy, theology, and poetry provide points of survey from which to take in, to the extent we can, the great panorama of the whole of things.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Kevin White is ordinary professor in Philosophy at The Catholic University of America.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments of Previous Publication
List of Abbreviations of Works by Thomas Aquinas
List of Abbreviations of Works by Augustine
Introduction
Part I. Thomistic Considerations
1. On Prologues
2. Oral Teaching
3. On Purpose
4. The Prologue to Friendship: Good Will
5. Wanting Something for Someone
6. Causes of Pleasure
7. Act and Fact
8. Philosophical Starting Points: Reason and Order
Part II. Others
9. The Meaning of Phantasia in Aristotle’s De anima, 3.3–8
10. Augustine on Number and Species
11. Cantos, Carte, and Columns: A Hypothesis Concerning the Original Mise-en-page of Dante’s Comedy
12. Accidents and Incidents: A Phenomenologist Reads T. S. Eliot
13. Theological Starting Points: God’s Presence and Absence in the World
Bibliography
Index

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