Some Reflections on the Common Good in Modern Catholic Social Doctrine | Prof. Russell Hittinger

preview_player
Показать описание
⭐️ Donate $5 to help keep these videos FREE for everyone!

Common good of a human society is a duplex ordo, a two-fold order. If you don’t get both, you’re going to make a mess of things.

For human beings, social union—the intrinsic common good—is what Aristotle and Aquinas call the form of order. It’s real, but it’s a social form and not a substantial form. And of course the extrinsic common good which is the end or the goal, maybe ends even in some cases, of the social form.

This lecture was given to the Dominican House of Studies on February 26, 2021 as part of the second installment of the annual Thomistic Circles series: What is the Common Good?

ABOUT THOMISTIC CIRCLES: Our Thomistic Circles Conferences at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. bring together prominent professors (principally in theology and philosophy), graduate students, seminarians, and Dominican brothers to provide a forum for examining contemporary questions from the perspective of classical Catholic theology, and to encourage the renewal of theology and philosophy in the Thomistic tradition.

These conferences are distinctive not only because of their academic quality, but also because they take place in the context of a vibrant Dominican studium and religious community. As befits the Dominican tradition, the serious study of theology and philosophy is integrated with the contemplation of the mysteries of the faith.

Thomistic Circles have been held under the auspices of the faculty at the Dominican House of Studies (founded in Washington, D.C. in 1905) for most of its history.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER: Russell Hittinger is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame and the University of St. Louis. He was the Warren Chair of Catholic Studies and Research Professor of Law at the University of Tulsa from 1996-2019. Russell has been a member of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas since 2001 and was appointed an ordinarius in the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences in 2009 by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. He has taught at Fordham University and at the Catholic University of America, as well as at many other universities as a visiting professor, including Providence College and Princeton. Along with a plethora of articles, he has written The First Grace: Rediscovering Natural Law in a Post-Christian Age and A Critique of the New Natural Law Theory.

—————————

Stay connected on social media:

Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I love lectures on important issues I know nothing about. Masters in Theology skipped this.

jamesabney
Автор

well, there is still one common good — perhaps the only common good — which we can love by amor amicitiae.

yuqiu
Автор

This all makes sense but it's like listening to Freedom die in real time and all the references to the 1940s are deeply saddening. Our whole life we've been beaten over the head about how a certain german government's regime was evil in every way and that we're never going back there... Yet here we are, studying ownership of people, exalting the family above society, collectively owning individuals, no freedom, ect. only it's Noah this time and not Moses. Did everyone lie? Hitchens was right?

This is wrong.

Nick_fb
Автор

Normally Thomistic Institute videos have clear, concise, thorough teaching from the perspective of a normal educated person.
This man sounds arrogant and condescending.
In the last 40 years there has been a flowering and proliferation of interest in and study of good Thomistic doctrine: Warren Murray at University of Laval, Thomas Aquinas College, University of Dallas, Maritain Institute, the International Theological Institute founded by St. John Paul the Great and there are others.
Charity and truth are vitally important. The Thomistic Institute labors earnestly to promote both.
This lecture does not.

loramcclamrock