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  1.  39
    The Object of the Intellect and Self-Knowledge in Thomas Aquinas in advance.Matthew Kostelecky - forthcoming - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly.
    This essay focuses on two technical and difficult notions in the thought of Thomas Aquinas: the object of the intellect and self-knowledge. I argue that the object of the intellect determines the character and content of self-knowledge. Prosecuting this case requires disambiguating our everyday use of object from Thomas’s technical sense of obiectum and unpacking Thomas’s ambiguous use of one term, “object of the intellect,” for multiple notions. For Thomas, self-knowledge occurs in virtue of the cognition of being (ens), and (...)
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  2.  30
    Thomas Aquinas’ Commentary on Boethius’ De Trinitate and the Structure of the Summa contra gentiles.Matthew Kostelecky - 2016 - Religious Studies and Theology 35 (1):73-98.
    In this essay, I argue that there are noteworthy textual and thematic links between Thomas’ Commentary on Boethius’ De Trinitate and the Summa contra gentiles that shed light on the contents and peculiarities of these two works. While it is commonly held through codicological research that these two texts are closely related, I have not found some of the precise thematic links I will be discussing announced, much less explored, in the literature or commentary tradition. I present these connections in (...)
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  3.  65
    Not Induction’s Problem: Aquinas on Induction, Simple Apprehension, and Their Metaphysical Suppositions (Manuscript Version).Matthew Kostelecky - 2014 - In Paolo C. Biondi & Louis F. Groarke, Shifting the Paradigm: Alternative Perspectives on Induction. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 301-322.
  4. Thomas Aquinas's Summa contra gentiles: A Mirror of Human Nature.Matthew Kostelecky - 2013 - Leuven: Peeters.
    The Summa contra gentiles is perhaps the most peculiar work of St. Thomas Aquinas, due to Thomas's decision to structure the work first according to what humans can say about God without revelation and then what humans can say about God once revelation is explicitly introduced. Such an approach to the human pursuit of the divine is otherwise unheard of in Thomas's own day, and this unusual structure has provided a fertile seedbed for a wide range of interpretations. Matthew Kostelecky's (...)
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  5.  43
    Thomas Aquinas (International Library of Essays in the History of Social and Political Thought). Edited by John Inglis.Matthew Kostelecky - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (4):678-680.
  6. The Human Person: What Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas Offer Modern Psychology.Thomas Spalding, James Stedman, Christina Gagné & Matthew Kostelecky - 2019 - Switzerland AG: Springer Nature.
    This book introduces the Aristotelian-Thomistic view of the human person to a contemporary audience, and reviews the ways in which this view could provide a philosophically sound foundation for modern psychology. The book presents the current state of psychology and offers critiques of current philosophical foundations. In its presentation of the fundamental metaphysical commitments of the Aristotelian-Thomistic view, it places the human being within the broader understanding of the world.
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