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Loving the many in the one: Augustine and the love of finite goods

Publication ,  Journal Article
Smith, JW
Published in: Religions
November 18, 2016

This is an essay in comparative ethics within the Platonist tradition. Although the primary focus is on Augustine’s account of rightly ordered love of neighbor in De vera religione, it analyzes Augustine’s account of the love of finite goods by comparing it with Plato’s grounding of the love of imperfect creatures within an ontological hierarchy in Symposium. Against the backdrop of the critique by modern readers that neither thinker’s teleological and hierarchical view of love allows for a real love of particular individuals, this essay will show how for Plato and Augustine alike, the love of the One—the Beautiful, for Plato, and God, for Augustine—conditions all other loves. Augustine’s ontological hierarchy of the one eternal God and the many created goods leads him to insist that the love of God, who alone is loved for his own sake, conditions the Christian’s love of neighbors whom she loves not for their own sake but for God’s. The Platonic ontology of Augustine’s theodicy, it will be argued, allows him to explain how use-love is a genuine expression of love for the neighbor in her particularity and yet remains subordinated to one’s highest love of God.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Religions

DOI

EISSN

2077-1444

Publication Date

November 18, 2016

Volume

7

Issue

11

Related Subject Headings

  • 5005 Theology
  • 5004 Religious studies
  • 2204 Religion and Religious Studies
 

Citation

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Smith, J. W. (2016). Loving the many in the one: Augustine and the love of finite goods. Religions, 7(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7110137
Smith, J. W. “Loving the many in the one: Augustine and the love of finite goods.” Religions 7, no. 11 (November 18, 2016). https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7110137.
Smith, J. W. “Loving the many in the one: Augustine and the love of finite goods.” Religions, vol. 7, no. 11, Nov. 2016. Scopus, doi:10.3390/rel7110137.

Published In

Religions

DOI

EISSN

2077-1444

Publication Date

November 18, 2016

Volume

7

Issue

11

Related Subject Headings

  • 5005 Theology
  • 5004 Religious studies
  • 2204 Religion and Religious Studies