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Eternal Life and Human Happiness in Heaven: Philosophical Problems, Thomistic Solutions

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Overview

Eternal Life and Human Happiness in Heaven treats four apparent problems concerning eternal life in order to clarify our thinking about perfect human happiness in heaven. The teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas provide the basis for solutions to these four problems about eternal life insofar as his teachings call into question common contemporary theological or philosophical presuppositions about God, human persons, and the nature of heaven itself. Indeed, these Thomistic solutions often require us to think very differently from our contemporaries. But thinking differently with St. Thomas is worth it: for the Thomistic solutions to these apparent problems are more satisfying, on both theological and philosophical grounds, than a number of contemporary theological and philosophical approaches.

Christopher Brown deploys his argument in four sections. The first section lays out, in three chapters, four apparent problems concerning eternal life—Is heaven a mystical or social reality? Is heaven other-worldly or this-worldly? Is heaven static or dynamic? Won’t human persons eventually get bored in heaven? Brown then explains how and why some important contemporary Christian theologians and philosophers resolve these problems, and notes serious problems with each of these contemporary solutions. The second section explains, in five chapters, St. Thomas’ significant distinction between the essential reward of the saints in heaven and the accidental reward, and treats in detail his account of that in which the essential reward consists, namely, the beatific vision and the proper accidents of the vision (delight, joy, and charity). The third section treats, in five chapters, St. Thomas’ views on the multifaceted accidental reward in heaven, where the accidental reward includes, among other things, glorified human embodiment, participation in the communion of the saints, and the joy experienced by the saints in sensing God’s "new heavens and new earth." Finally, section four argues, in four chapters, that St. Thomas’ views allow for powerful solutions to the four apparent problems about eternal life examined in the first section. These solutions are powerful because, not only are they consistent with authoritative, Catholic Christian Tradition, but they do not raise any of the significant theological or philosophical problems that attend the contemporary theological and philosophical solutions examined in the first section.

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  • Treats four apparent problems concerning eternal life in order to clarify our thinking about perfect human happiness in heaven
  • Presents the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas as the basis for solutions to these four problems about eternal life
  • Argues that St. Thomas solutions are worthy, and more satisfying, on both theological and philosophical grounds

Part I. Four Apparent Problems concerning Eternal Life

  • Contemporary Philosophy and Theology and Two Problems concerning the Nature of Heaven
  • Contemporary Philosophy and Theology and a Third Problem concerning the Nature of Heaven: Static or Dynamic Reality?
  • Contemporary Philosophy and Theology and the Problem of the Tedium of (Heavenly) Immortality

Part 2. St. Thomas on the Essential Reward in Heaven

  • Human beatitudo In Heaven: A Prolegomena
  • The Essential Reward I: The Essential Characteristics of the Beatific Vision
  • The Essential Reward II: The Primary and Secondary Objects of the Beatific Vision
  • The Essential Reward Ill: The Beatific Vision as Participation in God's Eternal Life
  • The Essential Reward IV: The Proper Accidents of the Beatific Vision

Part 3. St. Thomas on the Accidental Reward in Heaven

  • 9. The Accidental Reward I: The Relative Importance of Embodiment for Human Happiness in Heaven
  • The Accidental Reward II: Resurrection Bodies
  • The Accidental Reward III: Glorified Bodies
  • The Accidental Reward IV: The Communion of the Saints, the Aureoles, and the Fruits
  • The Accidental Reward V: Nonhuman Material Beings in Heaven

Part 4. Thomistic Solutions to Four Apparent Problems concerning Eternal Life

  • 14. AThomistic Solution to PNH-I: The Goods of the Beatific Vision and the City of God. Rightly Ordered
  • 15. AThomistic Solution to PNH-H: T'ransfigured Human Embodiment
  • 16. AThomistic Solution to PNH-HI: Heaven as Perfectly Dynamic
  • 17. AThomistic Solution to the Problem of the Tedium of Heavenly Immortality
A significant contribution to Aquinas' views on the afterlife, since it is the only comprehensive, one-volume inquiry into Aquinas on heaven, in conversation with contemporary analytic philosophy of religion.

Mark K. Spencer, University of St. Thomas, Minnesota

Brown’s book is equally insightful and well-executed. It contains not only careful, sustained engagement with Aquinas’s corpus, but it is also full of insights for contemporary philosophers of religion and theologians. Aquinas’s teachings on heaven have substantial explanatory power for a wide range of issues. Brown serves as an excellent guide to the riches of Aquinas’s thought.

Kevin Timpe, Calvin College

Detailed and rigorous philosophical analysis and argumentation concerning the precise nature of the afterlife is a neglected but fascinating part of the Thomistic tradition. A new study that brings this work into discussion with contemporary philosophy and theology is long overdue, and Christopher Brown has given us just that. This is an important, stimulating, and welcome contribution to the literature.

Edward Feser, Pasadena City College

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    $25.99

    Digital list price: $49.99
    Save $24.00 (48%)

    Gathering interest