Disputed Questions on Virtue

"Hause and Murphy are to be congratulated. [Their volume's] strong points are numerous and important. The translation is clear and faithful. A real advantage is using the as yet unpublished Leonine text, which is significantly superior to the Marietti edition. The translators retain the disputed question format. And the whole series is translated. Hause offers an extend commentary which is solid and helpful for beginning readers. . . . Even for Aquinas, who semper loquitur formalissime, first rate translations are hard to come by; and we have one here. . . . A gem."
     —R. E. Houser, University of St. Thomas (Houston, TX), in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

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26695g

Thomas Aquinas
Translated by Jeffrey Hause and Claudia Eisen Murphy
Introduction and Commentary by Jeffrey Hause

2010 - 426 pp. - Series: The Hackett Aquinas

Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Cloth 978-0-87220-926-8
$59.00
Paper 978-0-87220-925-1
$24.00

eBook available for $21.95. Click HERE for more information.

The third volume of The Hackett Aquinas, a series of central philosophical treatises of Aquinas in new, state-of-the-art translations accompanied by a thorough commentary on the text.

 

Reviews:

"Hause and Murphy are to be congratulated. [Their volume's] strong points are numerous and important. The translation is clear and faithful. A real advantage is using the as yet unpublished Leonine text, which is significantly superior to the Marietti edition. The translators retain the disputed question format. And the whole series is translated. Hause offers an extend commentary which is solid and helpful for beginning readers. . . .
     "Even for Aquinas, who semper loquitur formalissime, first rate translations are hard to come by; and we have one here. . . . A gem."
     —R. E. Houser, University of St. Thomas (Houston, TX), in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

 

"Hause and Murphy's translation rests on the provisional Latin text established by the Leonine commission, the best version currently available. . . . [The translators] take a conservative approach, keeping quite close to the Latin and adopting conventional translations of scholastic terms, such as passion for 'passio' and prudence for 'prudentia.' . . . Hause's commentary does much to clarify what Aquinas does and does not mean by a 'habitus.' On this and countless other topics, it explains Aquinas' thinking in terms comprehensible to beginners but without being boring to specialists. . . . A significant contribution to the study of Aqunias."
     —Bonnie Kent, University of California, Irvine, in Journal of the History of Philosophy

 

About the Authors:

Jeffrey Hause is Associate Professor of Philosophy, Creighton University.

Claudia Eisen Murphy is an independent scholar.

 


 

Also availalble in the Hackett Aquinas series:

 

The Treatise On the Divine Nature: Summa Theologiae I 1-13
Translated, with Commentary, by Brian J. Shanley, O.P.; Introduction by Robert Pasnau

 

The Treatise On Human Nature: Summa Theologiae 1a 75-89
Translated, with Introduction, Notes, and Commentary by Robert Pasnau