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Encyclopedia > Condemnations of 1277

The Condemnations at the medieval University of Paris were enacted with papal authority to restrict certain teachings as being heretical.


Condemnation of 1270

Enacted by Bishop Stephen Tempier in December 1270. Listed thirteen propositions as heretical and any one who practiced or taught them would be faced with the punishment of the Inquisition. The banned propositions were related to Averroes theory of the soul and the doctrine of monopsychism. Other propositions banned included Aristotles theory of God as a passive Unmoved Mover.


Conservative forces in the Church attempted to use the Condemnation for political purposes to stop, or at least control and contain, supposed threats to questions of theology posed by Aristotelian reason. In particular the Condemnation targeted such radical scholars as Siger of Brabant.


Condemnation of 1277

Also enacted by Bishop Tempier, these Condemnations listed 219 banned propositions. Among propositions banned included statements on Aristotles Physics: that God could not make several worlds or universes; that he could not move a spherical heavens with a rectilinear motion; that he could not make two bodies exist in the same place at once.


These condemnations eventually lead to a direct attack on the works of Thomas Aquinas.


External link

  • "Right, for the wrong reason" (http://www.economist.com/diversions/millennium/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=346780) from the The Economist.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Condemnations (University of Paris) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (289 words)
The Condemnations at the medieval University of Paris were enacted to restrict certain teachings as being heretical.
These condemnations eventually led to a direct attack on the works of Thomas Aquinas.
According to Pierre Duhem, the Condemnations led to the birth of modern science, because they forced thinkers to break from relying so much on Aristotle, and to think about the world in new ways.
Condemnation of 1277 (3791 words)
On March 7, 1277, the Bishop of Paris, Stephen Tempier, prohibited the teaching of 219 philosophical and theological theses that were being discussed and disputed in the faculty of arts under his jurisdiction.
Tempier's condemnation has gained great symbolic meaning in the minds of modern intellectual historians, and possibly for this reason, there is still considerable disagreement about what motivated Tempier to promulgate his prohibition, what exactly was condemned, and who the targets were.
“1277 Revisited: A New Interpretation of the Doctrinal Investigations of Thomas Aquinas and Giles of Rome,” Vivarium 34 (1997), 1-29.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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