
Giving One's Word
More specifically, Aquinas's psychological analogy is often accused of emphasizing the unity of the divine essence at the expense of the distinction of the divine Persons. In fact, it emphasizes distinction just as basically as it emphasizes unity, and it ensures that the distinction between the divine Persons is a radical one. Similarly, it is criticized for being a matter of self-knowledge instead of interpersonal knowledge, self-love instead of interpersonal love, and self-regard instead of self-giving. In fact, it is a matter of self-knowledge as interpersonal knowledge, self-love as interpersonal love, and self-regard as self-giving: it ensures that there can be no self-knowledge or self-love in God that is not just as basically interpersonal knowledge, interpersonal love, and interpersonal self-giving. Aquinas's psychological analogy, then, does not shut down the possibility of interpersonal Trinity. Nor does it need to be complemented from the outside by an interpersonal Trinity. Instead, it contains within itself an intensely interpersonal Trinity.
- Alaotsikko
- Interpersonal Love, Knowledge, and Self-Giving in Aquinas's Psychological Analogy for the Trinity
- Kirjailija
- Michael Joseph Higgins
- ISBN
- 9780813239484
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 446 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 31.7.2025
- Kustantaja
- THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS
- Sivumäärä
- 304