Description
With his customary lucidity, Pieper shows how all reality is positioned between the mind of God and the mind of man and is the basis for both man’s unquenchable yearning and the measure of all man’s knowledge. He then develops the Thomistic position that reality is also the basis for the good and therefore the norm of conscience and ethical action.
As Pieper himself expresses in part of the thesis of the second treatise, “An insight into the nature of the good as rooted in objective being, of itself compels us to carry it out in a definite human attitude, and it makes certain attitudes impossible.”
Josef Pieper was schooled in the Greek classics and the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas. He also studied philosophy, law and sociology, and has been a professor at the University of Munster, Germany. His books have been widely praised by both the secular and religious press.
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Josef Pieper, perhaps the most popular Thomist philosopher of the twentieth century, was schooled in the Greek classics and the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas. He also studied philosophy, law, and sociology, and he was a professor at the University of Munster, West Germany. His numerous books have been widely praised by both the secular and religious press.
You can see more Josef Pieper books by going here.