Entry 0367: Dating of the Texts in which Aquinas
Uses the Expression actus essendi
Aquinas uses
the expression actus essendi in the
quodlibetal questions only once, in Quodlibet 9, question 4, article 1, corpus.
Torrell explains that
at the time of Aquinas at the University
of Paris there were two
types of disputed questions, private and public. “The first, private dispute (disputatio privata), was held within the
school—the master with his students and bachelor only. The second type was
public (disputatio publica or ordinaria), and the master had to hold
it at regular intervals, though many willingly dispensed themselves from it,
for the exercise could be perilous.”
“The difference between the first and the second form was therefore the public,” Torrell adds, “since the students from other schools could attend, and sometimes masters as well. On occasion, they did not refrain from raising difficulties for the colleague engaged in the exercise. In one of its forms,” Torrell continues, “this second genre of disputed questions could even be a solemn public occasion (the famous Quodlibets), which were held twice a year, during Lent and Advent. They interrupted the regular courses at the university. As a result of P. Mandonnet’s labors, we can agree today in dating from this first period of teaching in Paris [1256-1259] Thomas’s Quodlibets VII though XI” (Torrell, Saint Thomas Aquinas, 60-61).
Text no. 9: Quodlibetal disputations, Quodlibet 9, question 4, article 1, corpus.
There
seems to be very little doubt that Quodlibet 9 was written between 1256 and
1259 when Aquinas was regent master in theology at the University of Paris .
Wippel, for example, writes that “From 1256
until 1259 Thomas carried out the functions of a Master (Professor) of Theology
at the University
of Paris . These duties
included conducting formal disputed questions (resulting in his Quaestiones disputatae De veritate) and
quodlibetal disputations (where any appropriate question could be raised by any
member in the audience, and would ultimately have to be answered by the
presiding Master). His Quodlibets 7-11 and his Commentary on the De Trinitate of Boethius resulted from
this period” (John F. Wippel, The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas Aquinas
[Washington , D.C. : The Catholic University of America
Press, 2000], xiv).
Torrell writes towards the end of his book that “Thomas’s Quodlibets can be divided into two groups, according to the two
periods of teaching in Paris .
Quodlibets I-VI and XII (the reportatio
of the latter was not revised by Thomas) come from the second period (1268-72)”
(Jean-Pierre Torrell, Saint Thomas Aquinas: The Person and His Work - Volume
1, trans. Robert Royal [Washington .
D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2005], 337). In other words, by process of elimination, Quodlibet
9 belongs to the group written during the first Paris regency.
Earlier Torrell was more specific about the
dating of the quodlibetal questions: “As to dates, after the first tentative
steps, the researchers have reached agreement on dividing the Quodlibets into
two groups according to the two Parisian sojourns: Quodlibets VII-XI belong to
the first period [1256-1259], while Quodlibets I-VI and XII (the reportatio of this latter was not
revised by Thomas) belong to the second [1268-72]” (Torrell, Saint Thomas
Aquinas, 208-209).
“The difference between the first and the second form was therefore the public,” Torrell adds, “since the students from other schools could attend, and sometimes masters as well. On occasion, they did not refrain from raising difficulties for the colleague engaged in the exercise. In one of its forms,” Torrell continues, “this second genre of disputed questions could even be a solemn public occasion (the famous Quodlibets), which were held twice a year, during Lent and Advent. They interrupted the regular courses at the university. As a result of P. Mandonnet’s labors, we can agree today in dating from this first period of teaching in Paris [1256-1259] Thomas’s Quodlibets VII though XI” (Torrell, Saint Thomas Aquinas, 60-61).