ALEXANDER OF HALES
WILLIAM TURNER
TRANSCRIBED BY GEOFFREY K. MONDELLO
|
|
Alexander of Hales Franciscan, theologian,
and philosopher, one of the greatest of the
scholastics, born at Hales, or Hailles, in
Gloucestershire, towards the end of the twelfth
century; died at Paris in 1245. He was educated
at the monastic school in his native village,
and probably also at Oxford. After having
finished his studies in England, he went
to the University of Paris, and there attained
the Master's degree, first in the faculty
of arts (philosophy), and afterwards in that
of theology.
|
|
Volume I
Alexander of Hales Franciscan, theologian,
and philosopher, one of the greatest of the
scholastics, born at Hales, or Hailles, in
Gloucestershire, towards the end of the twelfth
century; died at Paris in 1245. He was educated
at the monastic school in his native village,
and probably also at Oxford. After having
finished his studies in England, he went
to the University of Paris, and there attained
the Master's degree, first in the faculty
of arts (philosophy), and afterwards in that
of theology.
From a remark made by Roger Bacon it is inferred
that, in 1210, Alexander was Magister regens
in the faculty of arts, and this is the first
date of his biography that is certain. Roger
is also our authority (though not the only
one) that Alexander became archdeacon; but
whether the title was conferred by the Bishop
of Paris or by an English bishop, is uncertain.
In 1220, Alexander joined the faculty of
theology, in which he soon became one of
the most celebrated teachers. In 1231, he
entered the order of St. Francis, continuing,
however, to perform, as a monk, the duties
of a licensed teacher of theology, a fact
which was of the utmost importance both for
the University and for the course of studies
in the Franciscan Order. Alexander died at
the convent of his Order in Paris.
In the chronicles and theological treatises
of the fourteenth century we find Alexander
styled Doctor irrefragabilis, Fons Vitae,
Theologorum monarcha. His principal work
is the "Summa Universae Theologiae",
begun about the year 1231 and left unfinished.
The third part is defective, especially the
portion treating of the virtues and other
questions in moral theology. To supply this
defect, the "Summa Virtutum" was
composed by the Franciscan William of Melitona,
though the work was, and is still sometimes,
ascribed to Alexander himself. It is now
agreed that not Alexander of Hales, but Alexander
of Bonini is the author of the "Commentaries"
on Aristotle's "Metaphysics" and
"De Anima". The "Summa Theologiae"
has been several times published (Venice,
1475, 1576; Nuremberg, 1481, 1502; Pavia,
1481; Cologne, 1622). A critical edition
has recently been promised by Quaracchi editors
of the works of St. Bonaventure. Alexander's
other works (Salimbene, a contemporary, speaks
of his "many writings") are still
unpublished.
Alexander's importance for the history of
theology and philosophy lies in the fact,
that he was the first to attempt a systematic
exposition of Catholic doctrine, after the
metaphysical and physical works of Aristotle
had become known to the schoolmen. His is
not the first "Summa". The collections
of "Sentences" which were current
in the schools since the days of Abelard,
were summaries of theology and were often
so titled in manuscripts. So that Alexander
had many Summists as predecessors, as predecessors
for instance: Hugh of St. Victor, Roland,
Omnebene, Peter Lombard, Stephen Langton,
Robert of Melun, Peter of Poitiers, William
of Auxerre, and Robert Pulleyn. His, however,
is the first "Summa" in which use
was made of Aristotle's physical, metaphysical,
and ethical, as well as logical treatises.
Peter Lombard did not quote Aristotle once.
Alexander quotes him in almost every Quaestio;
he quotes also Arabian commentators, especially
Avicenna, and thus prepares the way for Albert,
St. Thomas, St. Bonaventure, and Duns Scotus
for whom Aristotle was the philosopher. The
"Summa" is divided into four parts:
the first treats of God, the Trinity, etc.;
the second, of creatures, sin, etc.; the
third of Christ, Redemption, supernatural
law; the fourth, of the sacraments. Each
part is divided into Questions, each Question
into Members, each Member into Articles.
The method is a development of that employed
by Abelard in his "Yea and Nay",
and is practically that with which readers
of St. Thomas are familiar. The article opens
with a recital of the objections, then follows
the thesis, with proofs, scriptural, patristic,
and rational, and at the end of the article,
under the title "Resolutio" are
given the answers to the objections.
Alexander's theology is, in its main outlines,
identical with that of St. Bonaventure and
St. Thomas. Thus he starts with the question
of the knowableness of God, and decides that,
while the human mind can know that He is,
no created mind can comprehend what He is.
In enumerating the proofs of the existence
of God, he lays stress on St. Augustine's
argument from the need of an absolute truth,
on Saint Anselm's ontological argument, on
Hugh of St. Victor's argument from consciousness,
and on the Aristotelean argument from causality.
He teaches that God is the exemplar, efficient
and final cause of all things, that He is
the creator and Preserver of all things,
that He is pure Actuality (Actus Purus),
all things else being composed of matter
and form.
This latter point, the coextensiveness of
matter with created being, later on became
a distinctive tenet of the Franciscan School.
On the problem of Universals, Alexander takes
up the position of a metaphysician and psychologist,
and thus reaches a conclusion to which his
predecessors of the twelfth century, who
argued the question solely from the point
of view of dialectics, could never have attained;
he teaches that Universals exist ante rem,
in the mind of God, and also in re, as forms
or essences which the active intellect abstracts.
This is the conclusion of Moderate Realism.
In psychology, more than elsewhere, Alexander
shows that he is not prepared to break with
the traditional Augustinian teaching which
prevailed in the schools before the introduction
of Aristotle's "De Anima". Thus
he adopts the threefold division of the faculties
of the soul into ratio, which has for its
object the external world, intellectus which
has for its object created spiritual substances,
and intelligentia, which has for its object
first principles and the eternal prototype
of things in the mind of God. Augustinian,
also, is the doctrine that our knowledge
of higher truths, especially of higher spiritual
truths, is dependent on special divine illumination.
Despite these Augustinian principles, however,
he adopts Aristotle's doctrine of the Active
and Passive Intellect, and by means of it
accounts for our knowledge of the external
world. Alexander's importance in the history
of Christian Ethics is due to the use which
he makes of Aristotle's ethical treatises.
William of Auxerre, in his "Summa Aurea",
made use of a Latin translation of Aristotle's
"Ethics"; following his example,
though working along independent lines, Alexander
takes up the problems of the Highest Good,
the nature of virtue, the moral aspect of
actions and habits, and brings to bear on
his discussions not merely the principles
of the evangelical law, the ethical definitions
of patristic writers, the legislation and
practice of the Church, but also the definitions
and principles laid down in the "Ethics".
God, he teaches, is the highest Good; man's
duty is through knowledge and love of God
to attain possession of Him. He defines virtue,
in the Aristotelean, not in the traditional
Augustinian sense. Alexander, being the first
of the great thirteenth century schoolmen
in point of time, naturally exercised considerable
influence on all those great leaders who
made the thirteenth century the golden age
of Scholasticism.
Within his own order he was the model of
other great Summists as to method and arrangement
of matter. Gerson says that Alexander was
a favourite teacher (doctor) of St. Thomas.
This, however, need not mean, as it is sometimes
taken to mean, that St. Thomas frequented
his lecture hall. The influence was exerted
chiefly, if not exclusively, through Alexander's
"Summa Universae Theologiae," which
St. Thomas followed very closely in the arrangement
and method of his "Summa Theologica".
ENDRES, Des Alex. von Hales Leben, etc. in
"Philosophisches Jahrb." (Fulda,
1888), I; FELDER, Studien im Franziskanerorden
(Freiburg, 1904), 177 sqq.; DE MARTIGNE,
La scolastique et les traditions franciscaines
(Paris, 1888); STOCKL, Gesch. der Phil. de
Mittelalters, Bd. II (Mainz, 1865), 320 sqq.;
TURNER. Hist. of Philosophy (Boston,
1905), 326 sqq.
 |