THE CONTINGENCY OF OUR OWN BEATITUDE. SOME REFLECTIONS ON GILSON’S “THE FUTURE OF AUGUSTINIAN METAPHYSICS” Cover Image

THE CONTINGENCY OF OUR OWN BEATITUDE. SOME REFLECTIONS ON GILSON’S “THE FUTURE OF AUGUSTINIAN METAPHYSICS”
THE CONTINGENCY OF OUR OWN BEATITUDE. SOME REFLECTIONS ON GILSON’S “THE FUTURE OF AUGUSTINIAN METAPHYSICS”

Author(s): James V. Schall
Subject(s): Philosophy, Metaphysics
Published by: International Étienne Gilson Society
Keywords: man; contingency; habit; virtue; vice; metaphysics; beatitude; God; Augustine; Aquinas; Gilson; Berry

Summary/Abstract: Inspired by selected passages from Wendell Berry’s story “A Place in Time,” the article discusses Étienne Gilson’s essay “The Future of Augustinian Metaphysics” with a special regard to the relation of habits to metaphysics. The basis of this relation is human being whose life, from the perspective of Augustinian metaphysics, is permanently unsettled. Man is the one mortal being whose perfection does not come with his being, but only with his own input into what it already is. Habits, then, prefect an already constituted human being in what he or she is. Man is not born, however, with habits, but acquires them through acts of the virtues or vices. The article develops the Augustinian idea according to which the moral effort of man to pursue virtues and escape vices results not so much from his natural desire of ‘beatitude’, but rather from the fact of being led to God by God.

  • Issue Year: 4/2015
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 7-16
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English