Retrieving Freedom: The Christian Appropriation of Classical Tradition

Retrieving Freedom: The Christian Appropriation of Classical Tradition

by D. C. Schindler
Retrieving Freedom: The Christian Appropriation of Classical Tradition

Retrieving Freedom: The Christian Appropriation of Classical Tradition

by D. C. Schindler

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Overview

Retrieving Freedom is a provocative, big-picture book, taking a long view of the “rise and fall” of the classical understanding of freedom.

In response to the evident shortcomings of the notion of freedom that dominates contemporary discourse, Retrieving Freedom seeks to return to the sources of the Western tradition to recover a more adequate understanding. This book begins by setting forth the ancient Greek conception—summarized from the conclusion of D. C. Schindler’s previous tour de force of political and moral reasoning, Freedom from Reality—and the ancient Hebrew conception, arguing that at the heart of the Christian vision of humanity is a novel synthesis of the apparently opposed views of the Greeks and Jews. This synthesis is then taken as a measure that guides an in-depth exploration of landmark figures framing the history of the Christian appropriation of the classical tradition. Schindler conducts his investigation through five different historical periods, focusing in each case on a polarity, a pair of figures who represent the spectrum of views from that time: Plotinus and Augustine from late antiquity, Dionysius the Areopagite and Maximus the Confessor from the patristic period, Anselm and Bernard from the early middle ages, Bonaventure and Aquinas from the high middle ages, and, finally, Godfrey of Fontaines and John Duns Scotus from the late middle ages. In the end, we rediscover dimensions of freedom that have gone missing in contemporary discourse, and thereby identify tasks that remain to be accomplished. Schindler’s masterful study will interest philosophers, political theorists, and students and scholars of intellectual history, especially those who seek an alternative to contemporary philosophical understandings of freedom.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780268203719
Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
Publication date: 07/15/2024
Series: Catholic Ideas for a Secular World
Pages: 550
Sales rank: 735,120
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.23(d)

About the Author

D. C. Schindler is professor of metaphysics and anthropology at the John Paul II Institute, Washington, DC. He is the author of more than a dozen books, including Freedom from Reality: The Diabolical Character of Modern Liberty.

Read an Excerpt

Freedom has an origin. We have come to take freedom for granted as an evident fact, one of the obviously given realities of the world, or else we dispute that reality, just as we might dispute other ostensibly obvious things, such as the existence of nature or the existence of God. If the question of freedom has become in the past century one of the classics of philosophical controversy—“free will” versus “determinism”—it is a sign that the ground of its evidence has become occluded, just as it has for the other questions just mentioned, namely, those of the existence of nature and of the existence of God. And indeed the ground, in the end, is the same in all three cases. At the core of the question of freedom ultimately lies the question of God, who is the source of both nature and freedom. To the extent that we allow the question of God to be eclipsed, which is to say that we block the intellect’s natural and essential access to God, whether we do so as individuals or as a culture, it is not simply that we begin to draw bad inferences regarding the existence or non existence of freedom; it is that we become incapable of raising proper questions to begin with, we become incapable of thinking fruitfully about freedom and inquiring into its reality in a genuinely productive way.

To say it again, freedom has an origin. There can be no freedom if there is no God at the origin of all things, no God who is at once Creator and Liberator of the world, who is free of his very being, whose nature it is to be both free and freeing. To be both free and freeing, this God must be able to give rise to a world that has its own reality in itself, its own principle of selforiginating self-motion, which exists in some fundamental way in itself and from itself. This God must not, then, stand in radical competition with this creaturely reality, but be able to share its reality himself, which is to say to enter into its history and to establish that history tout court, giving a liberating, theological sanction to what is in its essence a wholly natural reality. And this God must be able to do so because he is already in himself, in his own inner being, something like a reciprocity of wills, a reciprocity of freedom joined in love—a love that both generates and results from a non-reductive relation that can be perfectly, numerically one without being any less a reciprocity between abiding others.

If such a God is in fact the real origin of freedom, then the fate of freedom will be bound up with the fate of the self-revelation of this God in the actuality of created nature and of history. In this book, we have traced some of the key figures in the reception of this self-revelation, specifically in what concerns the nature and meaning of freedom. To be sure, there is no claim here to be exhaustive, even within the limits of this particular theme. God’s self-revelation has been received by an effectively infinite number of people, and it has been analogously different not only in every individual case, but more generally at different historical periods and geographical locations. Nevertheless, the figures we have chosen to study in some depth are paradigmatic, and collaborate together in their polarities, which span the extremes of the spectrum of possibility in a given period, to present an illuminating picture of the arc of freedom in the West, the rise and fall of the great classical Christian tradition. Plotinus represents a culminating point of the pre-Christian classical tradition, the point at which that tradition flourishes and allows its fruit to be taken up into the Christian form. It is not an accident that this bearing of fruit coincides with the first great insight into freedom, since freedom just is this fruitful generativity. As we saw, for Plotinus, the perfection of freedom is essentially a superabundant perfection, which has its own goodness always both in itself and out beyond itself. A key principle arose here, which proved to be crucial for the fate of Western freedom, as it has unfolded in the figures we have studied in this book: freedom requires a principle that simultaneously transcends the act-potency distinction and establishes that distinction in its properly asymmetrical order. This simultaneity is the meaning of generosity, the essence of gift, which creates things as good and as fruitful in their goodness. Plotinus, we might say, inaugurates the Western tradition of freedom by opening up an insight into this radically original generosity, even if he ultimately lacked the theoretical resources to sustain it.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations

Preface

Part I: Prolegomena

1. Christian Freedom and Its Traditions

Part II: Late Antiquity

2. Plotinus on Freedom as Generative Perfection

3. Augustine and the Gift of the Power to Choose

Part III: The Patristic Period

4. Perfectly Natural Freedom in Dionysius the Areopagite

5. Maximus the Confessor: Redeeming Choice

Part IV: The Early Middle Ages

6. St. Anselm: Just Freedom

7. Bernard of Clairvaux: Liberating Love

Part V: The High Middle Ages

8. Bonaventure on the Trinitarian Origin of Freedom

9. Thomas Aquinas: A Fruitful Reception of the Whole

Part VI: The Late Middle Ages

10. Godfrey of Fontaines: The Absolute Priority of Act

11. John Duns Scotus and the Radicalizing of Potency

Part VII: General Conclusion

12. The Givenness of Freedom

Bibliography

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