Truth and Person in Aquinas’s De veritate

In Joshua P. Hochschild, Turner C. Nevitt, Adam Wood & Gábor Borbély (eds.), Metaphysics Through Semantics: The Philosophical Recovery of the Medieval Mind / Essays in Honor of Gyula Klima. Springer Verlag. pp. 153-171 (2023)
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Abstract

Aquinas’s Disputed Questions on Truth (De veritate) are perhaps his most sustained examination of the implication that being is fundamentally and intrinsically intelligible and desirable, i.e., that “true” and “good” are transcendental terms convertible with “being.” I argue that the primary implication that Aquinas draws from this principle is that material creatures are not only intrinsically true and good, but that, in being so, they mediate a personal reality insofar as material creatures mediate the ideas and desires of a divine, creative mind and will to created minds and wills, for an infinite and perfect mind must be the transcendent ground or cause of the transcendental properties of being. So, just as creatures are inherently true and good, the created world is inherently inter-personal: all creatures, insofar as they exist, are inherently oriented towards communicating the mind and will of their Creator—not in actuality, but in potentiality, for the world becomes actually inter-personal only to the degree that the truth of its Creator is known by faith. This is so because the virtue of faith orients our minds and wills to Christ as the ground of the interpersonal nature of the world; but it also actualizes and perfects our intellects and wills by revealing that the mystery of the transcendent ground of truth and goodness is analogous to the mystery of the incarnate person.

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