THOMAS AQUINATIS DE PRINCIPIIS NATURAE CAPITA III – IV

Authors

  • Luciana Rohden da Silva (PUCRS)
  • Thiago Soares Leite (PUCRS)

Abstract

In the third chapter of De Principiis Naturae (for the first one, see Intuitio, 1/1 (2008), p. 125-9; for the second chapter, see Intuitio 1/2 (2008), p. 329-35), Thomas teaches that there are four kinds of cause, namely, efficient, material, formal and final; the difference between natural and voluntary agents; the difference among “principle”, “cause” and “element”. In chapter four, we learn the relation between the causes; about the division of “necessity” into “absolute” and “conditional”; the two kinds of “end”. KEY WORDS: Thomas Aquinas. Principles of Nature. Medieval Cosmology.

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Published

2009-06-20

How to Cite

da Silva (PUCRS), L. R., & Leite (PUCRS), T. S. (2009). THOMAS AQUINATIS DE PRINCIPIIS NATURAE CAPITA III – IV. Intuitio, 2(1), 257–269. Retrieved from https://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/intuitio/article/view/5383

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