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Published byRandolph Parsons Modified over 9 years ago
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José Todolí Duque Putting New Questions to an Old Tradition
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Student Navarre 1915-1999 Studied at Oxford, Louvain, Sorbonne & Walberberg Doctorates in theology at Angelicum & philosophy at Madrid Universities 1945 Secretary of Luis Vives Institute of Philosophy of Consejo superior de Investigaciones Cientificas Pioneer in Philosophy of Religion in Spain
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Philosopher of Religion Filosofía de la Religión (1955) –history, including RC orthodox distrust –facing modernist arguments, drawing on Aquinas Phenomenon of religion –transcendence, reality, holiness Basis of religion –Ontological, axiological, dynamic Noetics of religion –rational, instinctive, willed Religion as virtue –awareness by rational creatures, reverence, part of justice –the will guides people to the divinity
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“of those obscure natural tendencies, of those experiences in whose entrails we find as a correlative of the same to God the only possible explanation & justification of His existence, in the same way as when we study our religation with God, from the point of view of intelligence, we also encounter God as a correlative of our insatiable aspiration to truth.”
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Labour Filosofía del Trabajo (1955) Characteristics of labour –transformation, utility, obligation –definition: “useful & dutiful human activity” Classification of labour –starting from Aristotle’s Politics –harvesting, economic, organising, moral, intellectual Duty & right to labour –our need to co-operate, develop potential –our link in the chain of beings – ecological –duty to give back to society (UDHR), social value
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“All of the process, from the pure possibility… when one is born, up to the perfection of the personality...taking God’s assistance always into account, results from one’s labour. One sanctifies oneself in one’s work with things, in one’s daily job.”
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Common Good El Bien Comuń (1953) –faces question of ends & means: still relevant –from destructive C20 th ideologies to –Thomistic humanism inspired by CST Nature & Dignity of the Person –Human person is where spiritual & material unite –in relationship with God & others Supremacy of Common Good in Society –state (material good) & church (spiritual good) not opposed but in co-operation: need authority & organisation Individual & State –State aims to achieve social justice through positive law –Limited by inalienable rights, values & freedom of the person
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“The state should watch over… social justice for both workers and employers so that, if justice reigns, peace may reign everywhere in the peace, security and wealth which make up the material common good, which in turn prepares the common good in all orders.”
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Medical Transplants La Ética de los Transplantes (1968) 1960s transplants a novelty & new moral challenge: radical thought at the time Surgeons “must defend life wherever it may be & to the very end” Good, even heroic act to sacrifice a non- vital organ for another - e.g. one kidney No moral obstacle to heart transplants if death of the donor patient is certain
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Moral Consciousness Sociología y Moral: Lecture as John Paul II Chair (1971) Against Durkheim’s positivist “collective consciousness”: morality innate to humans Spanish 1970s religious & moral crisis: –“confusionism”, precipitative judgement, activism –context of political transition Liberty must be understood as “a capacity by humans, as against other beings, to fulfil their own end consciously & responsibly” Urgent need to recover sense of meaning for human existence
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