A Historical Study of a 13th Century Theological Problem
Table of Contents:
page IX Foreword
XI Introduction
XVII Sources
XVIII Literature
XXIII Abbreviations
Part One: THE IMMORTALITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON
1 Chapter 1. The Immortality of the Soul
1 I. The Soul as Mortal
13 II. The Soul as Immortal
13 A. The lmmortality of the Soul as Truth of Revelation
15 B. Proofs for the Immortality of the Soul
18 1. The Soul as Image and Likeness of God; The Incorruptibility of the Soul's Powers; The Immortality of God, Who is the Object of the Soul's Powers
24 2. The Soul as Form and "Hoc Aliquid"; The Soul as Created Directly by God; The Soul as an Intellectual Substance
30 3. The Mode of the Soul's Understanding; The Universals as Objects of the Soul's Understanding; The Soul's appetite for Immortality
33 Chapter 2. The Original Immortality of the Body
33 I. The Teaching of Sacred Scriptures as a Result of Sin as Opposed to the Teaching of "The Philosophers"
42 II. Theological Reasons for the Immortality of the Body
42 A. Divine Equity
46 B. The Immortality of the Soul
47 C. Man's Share in the Immortality of Christ
49 Chapter 3. The Original and Final Immortality of Man
49 I. The Immortality of Man as the "perpetua coniunctio animae et corporis"
58 II. Giles of Rome's Notion of Human Person and His Criticism of Hugo of St. Victor
65 Part Two: THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD
69 Chapter 1. The Metaphysical Possibility of the Resurrection
90 Chapter 2. The Natural and Supernatural Character of the Resurrection
97 I. The Resurrection as Natural
102 II. The Resurrection as Supernatural
105 Chapter 3. The Integrity of the Risen Body
124 Chrapter 4. The Immortality of the Risen Body
137 Summary
143 Index of Names
145 Index of Sources