Entry 0370: Dating of the Texts in which Aquinas
Uses the Expression actus essendi
Aquinas uses
the expression actus essendi only
once in his Commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics,
in the commentary on book 4, lecture 2, paragraph no. 6.
Torrell, however, affirms
that “The date and place of composition for the commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics pose numerous problems. The
designation of Book Lambda as Book
XII, a title that Thomas adopted toward the middle of 1271, invites us to date
the commentary on Books VII-XII after that date. The beginning of the
commentary may date from the academic year 1270-71. The commentary on Books II
and III may be the fruit of self-correction or of later editing. Begun in Paris , the composition of this work may have been finished
in Naples . The
only sure thing, in the current state of research, is that this text is earlier
than the De caelo et mundo, probably
composed in Naples, 1272-73” (Torrell, Saint Thomas Aquinas, 344).
Text no. 12: Commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics, book 4, lectio 2.
Aquinas’s
Commentary on the Metaphysics seems
to have been written between 1270 and 1272. Here are some remarks concerning
the date of composition of this work.
Commenting
on the derivation of the predicaments reported in the Commentary on Aristotle’s
Physics and in the Commentary on Aristotle’s
Metaphysics, John F. Wippel notes
that “While there is no substantial disagreement between these two attempts on Thomas's
part to derive the ten predicaments, we may wonder which comes later in time. It
is as difficult to answer this question with certainty as it is to determine
whether the Commentary on the Metaphysics
is prior to the Commentary on the Physics,
or perhaps vice versa. In fact, Weisheipl suggested that Thomas may have been
working on the two commentaries at approximately the same time -- the Physics (at Paris
from 1270 to 1271) and the Metaphysics
(at Paris , and possibly at Naples , from 1269 to 1272). As Weisheipl also
warns, we should not assume that Thomas composed his Commentary on the Metaphysics, at least in its final
version, in the order in which we number its books today. While accepting this
final point, Torrell places the Commentary on the Physics during the earlier part of Thomas's second teaching period
at Paris , ca.
1268-1269. Although he acknowledges the uncertainties surrounding the dating of
the Commentary on the Metaphysics, he
suggests that its beginning may date from the academic year 1270-1271, with the
Commentary on Books VII-XII falling after mid-1271 but before 1272-1273. Since
Torrell has been able to take into account more recent research concerning
this, he should be followed on this point. Consequently, it now appears that
Thomas's derivation of the predicaments in his Commentary on the Metaphysics expresses his most mature
thought on this issue” (John F. Wippel, The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas
Aquinas [Washington , D.C. : The Catholic University of America
Press, 2000], 223-224).
Torrell
points out that by the end of 1271, Thomas had adopted the numbering of the books
of the Metaphysics of William of
Moerbeke’s translation. “This fact,” Torrell explains, “is too little known by the average reader of Saint Thomas , but its
importance is great. Until Moerbeke’s translation, one referred to the Metaphysics according to the translation
by Michael Scot or according to the Translatio media, which was anonymous; both having omitted book Kappa, the book designated Lambda
was referred to as book XI. William of Moerbeke is the first to translate book Kappa, which in his translation will
become XI, while the book Lambda will
become book XII. This criterion has permitted us to divide Saint Thomas ’s works into two series, the one
which dates before the Moerbecana,
where the book Lambda is called XI,
the other which dates from after the Moerbecana,
when book Lambda is called XII. … The
key date, which is to say the date when Saint Thomas knew the Moerbecana of the Metaphysics, is situated towards the middle or the end of 1271” (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], 225, n. 2).