Vol. 6 No 2 (2004)
Artes

Le thomisme comme "philosophie chrétienne" chez Étienne Gilson et Claude Tresmontant

Alin Tat
Babes-Bolyai University, Greek-Catholic Faculty of Theology, Str. Motilor 26, 40001 Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Publiée 11/01/2004

Comment citer

Tat, A. (2004). Le thomisme comme "philosophie chrétienne" chez Étienne Gilson et Claude Tresmontant. Verbum – Analecta Neolatina, 6(2), 423–434. https://doi.org/10.1556/verb.6.2004.2.12

Résumé

Thomism as "Christian philosophy" wishes to provide an answer to the question of the relation between philosophy and theology in Saint Thomas Aquinas. The expression itself became famous with Etienne Gilson and the interesting debate that gathered some influential philosophers and theologians in the 1930's. For Gilson, Aquinas is the main figure of the Christian philosophy. Aquinas comes after a long tradition of "Christian philosophy", as Claude Tresmontant demonstrated in his works. According to him, the decisive facet of Christian metaphysics and, at the same time, its condition of possibility, is revelation. The questions of Christian philosophy are those of the human intellect that go from revelation to experience and from experience to revelation.