American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly

Volume 89, Issue 1, Winter 2015

Patrick J. Connolly
Pages 47-68

Henry of Ghent’s Argument for Divine Illumination Reconsidered

In this paper I offer a new approach to Henry of Ghent’s argument for divine illumination. Normally, Henry is criticized for adhering to a theory of divine illumination and failing to accept rediscovered Aristotelian approaches to cognition and epistemology. I argue that these critiques are mistaken. On my view, Henry was a proponent of Aristotelianism. But Henry discovered a tension between Aristotle’s views on teleology and the nature of knowledge, on the one hand, and various components of the Christian worldview, on the other. I argue that Henry’s adherence to a theory of divine illumination was an attempt to preserve various components of the Aristotelian system, not an attempt to reject Aristotelianism.