The Metaphysical Presuppositions of Being-in-the-World: A Confrontation Between St. Thomas Aquinas and Martin Heidegger
Caitlin Smith Gilson
Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010-02-01 - 219 pages
 

The
 Metaphysical Presuppositions of Being-in-the-World brings St. Thomas 
Aquinas and Martin Heidegger into dialogue and argues for the necessity 
of Christian philosophy. Through the confrontation of Heideggerian and 
Thomist thought, it offers an original and comprehensive rethinking of 
the nature of temporality and the origins of metaphysical inquiry. The 
book is a careful treatment of the inception and deterioration of the 
four-fold presuppositions of Thomistic metaphysics: intentionality, 
causality, finitude, ananke stenai. The analysis of the four-fold has 
never before been done and it is a central and original contribution of 
Gilson's book. The four-fold penetrates the issues between the 
phenomenological approach and the metaphysical vision to arrive at their
 core and irreconcilable difference. Heidegger's attempt to utilize the 
fourfold to extrude theology from ontology provides the necessary 
interpretive impetus to revisit the radical and often misunderstood 
metaphysics of St. Thomas, through such problems as aeviternity, 
non-being and tragedy.
 
 
 
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