Aquinas and Evolution – book
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword
Chapter I: Status Quaestionis
- The older and the newer Thomists
- The problem of “commensurability”
- Preliminary definitions
- The two questions to be answered
- Modus procedendi
- Ordering the arguments
Chapter II: Aquinas and the Origin of SpeciesIn the debate over evolution the relevant notion of species refers to the idea of natural species - a category broader than biological species.
- It seems that Aquinas’s teaching does not exclude theistic evolutionTE is the idea that God used secondary causes, such as evolution, to produce all animal and plant species. (objections)
- The origin of species In the debate over evolution the relevant notion of species refers to the idea of natural species - a category broader than biological species.according to Aquinas (corpus)
- Replies to the objections
Chapter III: Aquinas and the Augustinian Interpretation of Genesis
- Augustine and the six days of creation
- Augustine and the mode and order of creation
- Thomas and the Augustinian “seminal reasons”
- Augustine in the contemporary debate
Chapter IV: Aquinas and the Origin of Man
- The context of the contemporary debate
- Aquinas and the origin of the human body
- Aquinas and the origin of woman
Excursus 1: Human Origin in the 1992 Catechism
Chapter V: Aquinas and Intelligent Design
- It seems that Aquinas’s teaching excludes intelligent designID is a scientific theory which maintains that at least some biological structures must have been produced by an intelligent cause rather than by an interaction of chance and necessity alone. (objections)
- Aquinas and intelligent designID is a scientific theory which maintains that at least some biological structures must have been produced by an intelligent cause rather than by an interaction of chance and necessity alone. (corpus)
- Replies to the objections
Chapter VI: Thomists versus Thomas
- Aquinas and the progress of science
- Why do Thomists adopt theistic evolutionTE is the idea that God used secondary causes, such as evolution, to produce all animal and plant species.?
Excursus 2: Could God have used evolution?
Bibliography