Abstract
This special issue of Res Philosophica brings together articles exploring the theme of “Theological Dogma and Philosophical Innovation in Medieval Philosophy”.
Philosophy during the medieval period is deeply influenced and significantly shaped by the religious and theological commitments that define not only the outlook of its individual practitioners, but also the institutional and cultural context within which medieval philosophy develops. Philosophical theorizing during this period is often and explicitly in service of theological ends. And even when philosophers are not explicitly concerned with matters theological, philosophical speculation is nevertheless inevitably constrained by theological boundaries. After all, an adequate, systematic account of any aspect of reality must accommodate relevant theological data.
It would be easy, in light of this, to suppose that the theological commitments and constraints that characterize philosophy during this period had a largely stultifying effect on its development. But such an assumption, would significantly miss the mark. In point of fact, mapping the theological contours of the medieval philosophical landscape required a great deal of ingenuity and originality from philosophers engaged in the project. Indeed, as a number of the papers in this issue nicely illustrate, it is the attempt to philosophically articulate (or accommodate) the theological data that prompts some of the most interesting and important philosophical innovations to emerge during the period. What is more, the discussions included in this volume likewise shed light not only on ways in which theology stimulates philosophical innovation, but even ways in which it motivates distinctive modes of philosophical theorizing.