Summa Theologica (Eiximenis) facts for kids
Summa Theologica is a theological work written by Francesc Eiximenis in Latin possibly at the beginning of the 15th century. It belongs to the genre of the summae, that represented the highest point of the medieval theological thought.
Discovery
Only some parts have been preserved. They were found in the archive of the cathedral of Valencia by the Valencian Franciscan León Amorós. He also transcribed them and published them in the review Archivum Franciscanum Historicum in 1959.
Content of the preserved part
The most important part deals with predestination. Eiximenis' aim was to write about it in the Fourth Book of the Christian (this book was projected but not written). The other matters of the preserved parts are the following:
- Quid est suppositum (What supposition is).
- Quid est persona (What person is).
- Quid est persona secundum Ricardum (What person is according to Richard (Richard of Saint Victor).
- Quid demonstratio propter quid (What demonstration is according to the cause).
- Quid demonstratio quia (What demonstration is why).
- Quomodo Deus sit intelligibilis (How God is comprehensible).
- De lumine (About the light).
- De prescientia Dei (About God's prescience).
Date
León Amorós arrives to the conclusion that this Summa was written at the same time as the Vida de Jesucrist (Jesus Christ's life), owing to the constant references that in this work are made to the Summa, and owing to the fact that the references to the Summa only appear in the Vida de Jesucrist, and not in any other of Eiximenis' work. And the Vida de Jesucrist was concluded by Eiximenis at the beginning of the 15th century.
Digital editions
- Edition in the NARPAN Electronic Library.
- The Summa Theologica inside Eiximenis' complete works (in Catalan and Latin).
See also
In Spanish: Summa Theologica (Eiximenis) para niños