18 results on '"Peter A. Redpath"'
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2. With a Diamond in His Shoe: Reflections on Jorge J. E. Gracia’s Quest for Self-Perfection
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Peter A. Redpath
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jorge j. e. gracia ,philosophy ,comparative literature ,thomism ,virtual quantity ,self-perfection ,tradition ,identity ,catholicism ,religious faith ,organizational psychology ,ragamuffin thomist ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
Jorge J. E. Gracia, was born in Cuba in 1942. At age 19, he escaped Cuba and arrived in the United States. In 2019, 58 years later, in a nation which, prior to his arrival in North America, had no major Latino cultural presence in higher education and philosophy, Gracia rose to hold the Samuel P. Capen Chair and State University of New York at Buffalo Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Comparative Literature. In this position, he became the leading figure to institutionalize Latin American philosophy in the U.S. academy and an internationally-renowned scholar in medieval philosophy. Jorge J. E. Gracia died in the United States on July 13, 2021. In this paper the author shows that what properly explains the philosophical and adult-personal life of Gracia is the Thomistic principle of virtual quantity. He contends that the only way to understand Gracia’s personal and philosophical life is to grasp this life as one of an organizational psychologist pursuing perfect self-realization in action and understanding: someone chiefly interested in intellectually grasping precisely how organizational wholes (including his own psyche) become united and divided, and operate when so united and divided.
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- 2021
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3. The Uncommon Common Sense of the Science of Economics: Sound Money and How it Relates to the Economist as Liberal Artist and Prudential Organizational Psychologist
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Peter A. Redpath
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thomas aquinas ,common sense ,science of economics ,sound money ,economics ,liberal art ,organizational psychology ,money ,economic activity ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
Well known to students of St. Thomas Aquinas is that he maintained that the whole of a science is contained in its principles and that its principles are contained in its definitions. The author takes as his point of departure for this article a definition of money that he gave in the article he wrote for the 2019 Aquinas School of Leadership’s School of Economics inaugural issue for the Studia Gilsoniana: “Aristotle and Aquinas on the Virtue of Money as a Preservative of Justice in Business Affairs and States.” According to him, as a species of economic activity, the definition of money must contain what Aquinas considered to be his generic definition of the science of economics and the essential principles he thought this definition contains. The present article he writes is an attempt to unpack some implications contained in St. Thomas’s generic definition of the science of economics of which money is a species.
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- 2021
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4. Religion and Economics: Editors’ Introduction
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Peter A. Redpath, Marvin B. D. Peláez, and Jason Morgan
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religion ,economic science ,philosophy ,science ,economics ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The response to the special 2019 issue of Studia Gilsoniana on economics was so positive that it led to the creation of the Aquinas School of Leadership School of Economics (ASLSE). This 2021 publication is, therefore, a second special issue of Studia Gilsoniana on the same theme and the second installment of ASLSE’s economic journals. We are delighted to present here further fruits of thought from the maturing Studia Gilsoniana and ASLSE partnership. Economics is held to be a value-free, scientific enterprise, and as such there can be no relationship between economics and religion. Ayn Rand, a well-known novelist-turned-philosopher, took this position in an unapologetic way in her writings, specifically in her novel Atlas Shrugged. The contrary position to what we might call the Randian “strict separation” thesis holds that economics and religion are related, in some way and to some degree, and therefore should be considered in tandem. The papers in this special edition of Studia Gilsoniana set out to show the extent and quality of the relationship between economics and religion from a variety of viewpoints and historical periods.
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- 2021
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5. How to Reverse the Widespread Global Disorder That Nonsensical Principles of Utopian Socialism/Marxism Are Currently Causing
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Peter A. Redpath
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socialism ,marxism ,common sense ,wisdom ,prudence ,human nature ,human person ,the west ,moral psychology ,education ,thomas aquinas ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This article considers the nature of Marxism as a species of Enlightenment Utopian Socialism, the relation of both these to a denial of nature of common sense properly understood. It argues that underlying all species of Enlightenment Utopian Socialism are psychological principles that deny the reality of evidently known first principles of understanding that are measures of truth in all forms of psychologically healthy human knowing and reasoning. In addition, it maintains that, as a result of these essentially anarchic psychological first principles inherent in its nature, any attempt to apply any species of Utopian Socialism to develop healthy social organizations and cultural institutions—such as forms of human communication and educational and political instittions—is doomed to fail. Utopian Socialism will always destroy common sense in whatever it infects with its disordered habits of understanding and reasoning.
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- 2021
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6. Why, Through Application of Its Educational Principles, the New World Order Can Never Generate Higher Education
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Peter A. Redpath
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adler ,aristotle ,betterment ,capacity ,education ,educator ,good ,happiness ,harmonize ,human nature ,ignorance ,justice ,knowledge ,liberal arts ,organizational whole ,perfection ,potentiality ,power ,prudence ,soul ,teaching ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This article defends the teaching of Mortimer J. Adler that human education must aim at the betterment of human beings by forming good habits in us; and that, if intellectual and moral virtues, or good habits, are the same for all human beings because our natural capacities are the same and tend naturally to the same developments, then what logically follows is that the intellectual and moral virtues, or good habits, as the ends of education, are the absolute and universal principles on which education should always and everywhere be founded. This being the case, it concludes that, because of its essential foundation in the essentially flawed Enlightenment understanding of human nature, the New World Order can never be a cause of higher education, can, at best, cause a caricature of it.
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- 2020
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7. 14 Evident Truths from the Organizational Genius of St. Thomas Aquinas: How 'Born Again Thomism' Can Help Save the West from Cultural Suicide
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Peter A. Redpath
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thomas aquinas ,thomism ,west ,enlightenment ,neo-thomism ,pope francis ,new evangelization ,culture ,end ,communication ,experience ,genus ,habit ,induction ,leader ,leadership ,nominalism ,organization ,part ,philosophy ,principle ,proportionality ,ragamuffin ,science ,sense ,species ,truth ,unity ,whole ,wonder ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This paper is written to articulate in a summary form 14 evidently-known essential and personalistic principles from the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas needed, especially by Pope Francis, to understand a third period of neo-Thomism we are now in: Born-again, or Ragamuffin, Thomism. It maintains that, without application of these principles to the Church’s “new evangelization,” this movement will fail. With that failure the Church will be unable to halt the cultural suicide in which the West is presently engaged.
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- 2020
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8. Aristotle and Aquinas on the Virtue of Money as a Preservative of Justice in Business Affairs and States
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Peter A. Redpath
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money ,communication ,commutative ,contribution ,convention ,currency ,demand ,equality ,exchange ,hierarchy ,human ,inequality ,just ,justice ,law ,life ,measure ,natural ,nomos ,numerical ,preservation ,proportionate ,proportionality ,use ,value ,virtue ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
While Aristotle’s and St. Thomas’s teachings about economics are often ridiculed today, this article argues that actually what they had to say about this issue, especially about the nature of sound currency, backed up by force of law, is quite profound. According to both of them, sound money plays an essential role in the preserving commutative justice within States. By so doing, it preserves communication between talented people who make qualitatively unequal contributions to a State’s continued existence and welfare.
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- 2019
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9. A Return to Pre-Modern Principles of Economic Science: Editors’ Introduction
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Peter A. Redpath, Marvin B. D. Peláez, and Jason Morgan
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economic science ,pre-modernism ,principle ,philosophy ,science ,economics ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This edition of Studia Gilsoniana inaugurates submission of articles on economic science based upon pre-modern principles of philosophy/science. Today, many journals address the intersection of economics and philosophy. Their contributors include practicing economists, economic historians, economist-philosophers, philosopher-economists, and economic methodologists. Research in this interdisciplinary field began to appear in the 1970s and later took shape in the 1980s with the appearance of its specialized academic journals. Today, the intersection of economics and philosophy is a vibrant area of inquiry and research. Books and journal pages are replete with references to classical philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle and their contributions to economic science. However, stronger connections need to be made related to the application of economic principles from the past to the present based upon enduring pre-modern principles of science. This is precisely what this inaugural issue celebrates.
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- 2019
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10. Aquinas’s Fourth Way of Demonstrating God’s Existence: From Virtual Quantum Gradations of Perfection (Inequality in Beauty) of Forms Existing within a Real Genus
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Peter A. Redpath
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Thomas Aquinas ,fourth way ,God ,existence ,genus ,species ,individual ,principle ,analogous predication ,unity ,number ,virtual quantity ,privation ,perfection ,resistance ,receptivity ,opposition ,contrariety ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The chief aim of this article is to show that St. Thomas Aquinas’s Fourth Way of demonstrating God’s existence can only be made precisely intelligible by comprehending it as a real, generic whole in light of its specific organizational principles. Considered as a real, generic whole, this argument is one from effect to cause (from a real order of more or less perfectly existing generic, specific, and individual beings [habens esse] more or less perfectly possessing generic, specific, and individual ways of being within qualitatively different, hierarchical, orders of existence to a first cause of this order of perfections). In addition, this article maintains that, to comprehend this complicated argument, readers mush be familiar with philosophical principles that St. Thomas repeatedly uses throughout his major works, but with which most of his contemporary students tend to be unfamiliar. Consequently, a secondary aim of this paper is to introduce readers unfamiliar with them to some of these principle so that they may be able better to comprehend what St. Thomas is saying in this demonstration and in other teachings of his as well.
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- 2019
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11. A Modest Proposal for Resolving the Apparently Never-Ending Evolution Debate: Reconsidering the Question
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Peter A. Redpath
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Charles Darwin ,Aristotle ,Thomas Aquinas ,genus ,species ,substance ,evolution ,universals ,metaphysics ,logic ,science ,nominalism ,evolutionism ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The author makes an attempt to show why (1) Darwin’s teaching in The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection and The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex cannot be “scientific” in a modern, classical, or any, sense and that, consequently, in them, (2) Darwin did not scientifically prove the reality of evolution of species. He claims that, while the question of the origin of genera and species is principally and primarily a metaphysical problem, Darwin’s ignorance of the nature of philosophy and metaphysics and the complexity of the problem of the nature of genera and species caused him mistakenly to frame this metaphysical problem as one of physics, more precisely as one of biology, which Darwin reduced to a natural history of living, physical beings.
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- 2019
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12. Memorial Eulogy: Max Weismann—One of God’s Great Ideas
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Peter A. Redpath
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Ronald Max Weismann ,Center for the Study of The Great Ideas ,Western civilization ,Thomism ,Christian philosophy ,Christian education ,organizational psychology ,human soul ,human person ,rational animal ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This paper is the eulogy which was delivered by Dr. Peter A. Redpath (Senior Fellow, Center for the Study of The Great Ideas) on the occasion of the funeral of Ronald “Max” Weismann (1936–2017) on 06 May 2017 at St. John Chrysostom Church, Chicago, USA.
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- 2018
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13. Why Augustinian Apologetics and Logical Dialectic Are Not Enough to Defend the Reasonableness of the Christian Faith in an Increasingly-Fragmented World
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Peter A. Redpath
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Christian ,Christian philosophy ,Christian cultural whole ,culture ,psychology ,education ,identity ,organization ,organizational psychology ,principle ,philosophy ,self-understanding ,soul ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
From close to its inception, St. Augustine’s misunderstanding of the nature of ancient Greek philosophy, “Christian philosophy,” and the way the human soul essentially relates to human body caused formal Christian education to be (a) born in a somewhat unhealthy condition, (b) founded upon a devastating mistake of organizational self-misunderstanding, which essentially prevented it from comprehending how human reason could function both abstractly as a contemplative (or speculative) scientific intellect and concretely as a command and control prudential reason. This flaw in Augustinian psychology of the human person and Augustine’s misunderstanding of the nature of ancient Greek philosophy continued to influence Christian education from the start of the Christian West until the Christian and secular universities of today. For contemporary Christian education to preserve its identity in an increasingly fragmented world, a psychology of the human person adequate to explain the essential connection between the human soul and body and the nature of philosophy must replace this flawed Augustinian psychology that continues to plague the contemporary world.
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- 2018
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14. The Nature of Common Sense and How We Can Use Common Sense to Renew the West
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Peter A. Redpath
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Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
Since most pressing today on a global scale is to be able to unite religion, philosophy, and science into parts of a coherent civilizational whole, and since the ability to unite a multitude into parts of a coherent whole essentially requires understanding the natures of the things and the way they can or cannot be essentially related, this paper chiefly considers precisely why the modern world has been unable to effect this union. In so doing, it argues that the chief cause of this inability to unite these cultural natures has been because the contemporary world, and the West especially, has lost its understanding of philosophy and science and has intentionally divorced from essential connection to wisdom. Finally, it proposes a common sense way properly to understand these natures, reunite them to wisdom, and revive Western and global civilization.
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- 2014
15. The Essential Connection between Common Sense Philosophy and Leadership Excellence
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Peter A. Redpath
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Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
This article argues that, strictly speaking, from its inception with the ancient Greeks and for all time, philosophy and science are identical and consist in an essential relationship between a specific type of understanding of the human person as possessed of an intellectual soul capable of being habituated and a psychologically-independent composite whole, or organization. It maintains, further, that absence of either one of the extremes of this essential relationship cannot be philosophy/science and, if mistaken for such and applied to the workings of cultural institutions, will generate anarchy within human culture and make leadership excellence impossible to achieve. Finally, it argues that only a return to this “common sense” understanding of philosophy can generate the leadership excellence that can save the West from its current state of cultural and civilizational anarchy.
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- 2014
16. The Essential Connection between Modern Science and Utopian Socialism
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Peter A. Redpath
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Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The chief aim of this paper is to demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt how, through an essential misunderstanding of the nature of philosophy, and science, over the past several centuries, the prevailing Western tendency to reduce the whole of science to mathematical physics unwittingly generated utopian socialism as a political substitute for metaphysics. In short, being unable speculatively, philosophically, and metaphysically to justify this reduction, some Western intellectuals re-conceived the natures of philosophy, science, and metaphysics as increasingly enlightened, historical and political forms of the evolution of human consciousness toward creation of systematic science, a science of clear and distinct ideas. In the process they unwittingly wound up reducing contemporary philosophy and Western higher education largely into tools of utopian socialist political propaganda.
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- 2014
17. Gilson as Christian Humanist
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Peter A. Redpath
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Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The author suggests that the intellectual life of Étienne Gilson constituted a new humanism, that Gilson’s scholarly work was part of a new renaissance, that a new humanism that Gilson thought is demanded by the precarious civilizational crisis of the modern West after World Wars I and II. He also argues that, more than anything else, Gilson was a renaissance humanist scholar who consciously worked in the tradition of renaissance humanists before him, but did so to expand our understanding of the notion of “renaissance” scholarship and to create his own brand of Christian humanism to deal with problems distinctive to his age. The author shows the specificity of the Christian humanism that Gilson developed as part of his distinctive style of doing historical research and of philosophizing.
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- 2012
18. The Importance of Gilson
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Peter A. Redpath
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Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Metaphysics ,BD95-131 - Abstract
The author aims at answering why preserving, reading, and understanding the work of Étienne Gilson is crucial for the Western civilization if one wishes to be able to understand precisely the problems that are besetting the West and how one can best resolve them. He claims that among all the leading intellectuals of the past or present generation, no one has better diagnosed the philosophical ills of Western culture and better understood the remedy for those ills than has Étienne Gilson.
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- 2012
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