Housing the Powers

Medieval Debates about Dependence on God

Marilyn McCord Adams author Robert Merrihew Adams editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:3rd Feb '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Housing the Powers cover

Housing the powers? What powers? Soul powers -- powers that shape the lives of human souls. They may be housed, and exercised, by those souls or by other agents. This book is about views on that subject developed by Christian philosophical theologians in western Europe from the mid-12th to the early 14th century, with some borrowing of thoughts from their Islamic counterparts. Chapters 1 to 3 discuss in increasing breadth and depth those theologians' views about their own housing and exercise of soul powers. Chapters 4 to 8 discuss their views as to the possibility of some of our soul powers being outsourced -- that is, housed and exercised by God or a super-human emanation of God. Chapter 4 is about outsourcing the subject -- in an Islamic form that postulated an outsourcing of intellectual thinking from individual human beings to a single intellect that is eternally emanated from God and is the sole thinker of all the thoughts that humans ever think. That theory attracted the interest, though not the agreement, of European Christian philosophers. They found ideas of outsourcing the object, rather than the subject, of religious thought more congenial. The remaining four chapters of the book deal with that more congenial topic. In chapters 5 and 6 the focus is mainly on divine gifts of knowledge and understanding, and in chapters 7 and 8 on gifts of action and willing or desire.

I find most of the interpretative claims that Adams defends in Housing the Powers convincing. I am confident that her book will soon become standard reading for anyone working on Latin medieval theories of causal powers. * Can Laurens Löwe, Speculum *
The greatest strength of the book is Adams's almost ruthless way of getting to the bottom of things: she sees where certain seemingly innocuous claims eventually lead and chases disagreements to their ultimate source-which can be a rather difficult task in the case of the authors under consideration, who share a basic theological outlook as well as a broadly speaking Aristotelian background. This ruthlessness makes the discussion of these otherwise relatively well-known issues unique and fascinating. * Zita V. Toth, Journal of the History of Philosophy *

ISBN: 9780192862549

Dimensions: 223mm x 143mm x 18mm

Weight: 396g

240 pages