Modernity, Disenchantment, and the Mediaeval Discovery of Nature.
Week 3 (5 – 11 May)
Wednesday 8th May
Recollection Lecture: Modernity, Disenchantment, and the Mediaeval Discovery of Nature.
Hans Boersma (Professor in Ascetical Theology, Nashotah House).
Wednesday 8th May The Peter Toon Memorial Lecture: Modernity, Disenchantment, and the Mediaeval Discovery of Nature Hans Boersma (Professor in Ascetical Theology, Nashotah House). Marie-Dominique Chenu famously located the “discovery of nature”— and the source of modern disenchantment—in the twelfth century. This lecture picks up Chenu’s argument by tracing the separation of nature and the supernatural beyond the late Middle Ages to the theology of Saint Thomas Aquinas. In light of the theological changes introduced by Aquinas, we should sympathetically reappraise the traditionalist Bishop Stephen’s condemnations issued in 1277. In short, the secularism of modernity requires that we read creation not primarily as substance but as relationship: the harmonious chant of the love that is God.
Date:
8 May 2024, 16:00 (Wednesday, 3rd week, Trinity 2024)
Venue:
Pusey House
Speaker:
Hans Boersma (Professor in Ascetical Theology, Nashotah House).
Organiser:
Pusey House (Oxford)
Part of:
Recollection Lectures
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Public
Editor:
Claire MacLeod