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From Metaphysics to Kataphysics: Bonaventure's ‘Good’ Creation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2011

Ilia Delio*
Affiliation:
Woodstock Theological Center, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20057, USA, id72@georgetown.edu

Abstract

The question of ecology is fundamentally a question of relatedness. Is the Christian tradition, at once incarnational and other-worldly, responsible for the ecological crisis? This article examines the position of Bonaventure whose unique theological-philosophical synthesis leads to a new understanding of created reality, which I term ‘kataphysics’. The foundation of kataphysics begins with Bonaventure's understanding of philosophy as a heteronymous discipline, insofar as philosophy is completed and perfected in theology. From this position he develops an understanding of Being as Goodness based on the Trinity. Bonaventure's integral relationship between Trinity and creation leads to an understanding of created reality as essentially good and intrinsically relational. The integral relation between Trinity and creation through the divine Word gives rise to a theological metaphysics; the metaphysical question becomes the christological question and hence a new understanding of created reality, kataphysics, emerges which involves relatedness. It is suggested that kataphysics undergirds a Christian philosophy of nature which has implications for an ecological stance today.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 2011

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References

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9 Ibid., d. 28, a. 1, q. 2, ad 4 (1.502).

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14 Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum (Itin.) 5.7 (5.309).

15 Ibid. 5.7 (5.309). Engl. trans. Cousins, Bonaventure, p. 98.

16 Bonaventure, Itin. 5.2 (5.307).

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18 Bonaventure, Itin. 6.2 (5.310). See Kretzmann, Norman, ‘A General Problem of Creation: Why Would God Create Anything at All?’, in Being and Goodness: The Concept of the Good in Metaphysics and Philosophical Theology ed. MacDonald, Scott (New York: Cornell University Press, 1991), p. 225Google Scholar. Kretzmann claims that the first adjective in each pairing is more readily associated with static self-sufficiency or the Being side of the Being–Goodness relationship, whereas the second adjective brings out dynamic self-diffusion, or the Goodness side. However, I would argue that there is no relationship per se between Being and Goodness; rather, Being is Goodness.

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28 Hayes, ‘Incarnation and Creation’, p. 315.

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31 This position differs from Thomas who rejects exemplarity as a separate form from created Being, that is, Platonic ‘extrinsicism’. Rather, essential forms are inherent in things. See Jan A. Aersten, ‘Good as Transcendental and the Transcendence of the Good’, in Scott MacDonald (ed.), Being and Goodness: The Concept of the Good in Metaphysics and Philosophical Theology, p. 69.

32 Hayes, introduction to Disputed Questions, p. 45.

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36 Ibid., p. 116.

37 Ibid., p. 115.

38 Bonaventure, Collationes in Hexaëmeron (Hex.), 1.17 (5.332).

39 Ibid. 1.13 (5.331).

40 Edwards, Denis, ‘The Discovery of Chaos and the Retrieval of the Trinity’, in Chaos and Complexity: Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action (Rome: Vatican Observatory Publications, 1995), pp. 161–2Google Scholar; Bowman, Leonard, ‘The Cosmic Exemplarism of Bonaventure’, Journal of Religion 55 (1975), pp. 182–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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44 Ibid., S91.

45 Ibid., S92.

46 Hayes, ‘Meaning of Convenientia’, p. 99.

47 Hayes, ‘Christology and Metaphysics’, S88–S92.

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55 Hayes, ‘Christology and Metaphysics’, S88. See a related argument by Adrian Pabst who shows through Platonic metaphysics that every being is individuated because it is a particular reflection of the universal Good and thus a unique and singular expression of God's self-communicative actualisation in the world. Bonaventure's kataphysics christianises Platonic metaphysics and thus provides a more theological basis for the primacy of relationship and individuation. Pabst, Adrian, ‘The Primacy of Relation over Substance and the Recovery of a Theological Metaphysics’, American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81/4 (2007), pp. 553–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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63 Mary Beth Ingham, ‘A Certain Affection for Justice’, The Cord 45–3 (1995), p. 17.