John Scotus
Eriugena or Johannes Scotus Erigena (/dʒoʊˈhæniːz
ˈskoʊtəs ɪˈrɪdʒənə/; Ecclesiastical
Latin: [joˈan.nes ˈskoː.tus eˈriː.d͡ʒe.na]; c. 815 - c.
877) was an Irish theologian, neoplatonist
philosopher, and poet. He
wrote a number of works, but is best known today for having written The
Division of Nature, which has been called the "final achievement"
of ancient
philosophy, a work
which "synthesizes the philosophical accomplishments of fifteen
centuries."
Eriugena argued on behalf of
something like a panentheistic definition of nature.[2] He translated and made commentaries
upon the work of Pseudo-Dionysius, and was one of the few Western
European philosophers of his day that knew Greek, having studied in Byzantine Athens. Famously, he is said to have been stabbed to
death by his students at Malmesbury with their pens.
Name
The form "Eriugena" of his
byname is used by John Scotus to describe himself in
one manuscript.[citation needed] It means '
He is not to be confused with the
later philosopher John Duns
Scotus.
Life
Johannes Scotus Eriugena was an
Irishman, educated in
The latter part of his life is
unclear. There is a story that in 882 he was invited to Oxford by Alfred the Great, laboured there for many years,
became abbot at Malmesbury, and was stabbed to death by his
pupils with their styli. Whether this is to be taken literally
or figuratively is not clear,[5] and some scholars think it may
refer to some other Johannes.[6] He probably never left
Works
His work is largely based upon Saint
Augustine, Pseudo-Dionysius, Maximus
the Confessor, and
the Cappadocian
Fathers, and is
clearly Neoplatonist. He revived the transcendentalist standpoint of Neoplatonism with its "graded hierarchy"
approach. By going back to Plato, he revived the nominalist-realist debate.[8]
The first of the works known to have
been written by Eriugena during this period was a treatise on the Eucharist, which has not survived. In it he
seems to have advanced the doctrine that the Eucharist was merely symbolical or
commemorative, an opinion for which Berengar
of Tours was at a
later date censured and condemned. As a part of his penance, Berengarius is
said to have been compelled to burn publicly Eriugena's treatise. So far as we
can learn, however, Eriugena was considered orthodox and a few years later was
selected by Hincmar, archbishop
of Reims, to defend
the doctrine of liberty of will against the extreme predestinarianism of the monk Gottschalk (Gotteschalchus). Many in the
Church opposed Gottschalk's position because it denied the inherent value of
good works. The treatise De divina praedestinatione composed for this
occasion has been preserved, and it was probably from its content that Eriugena's
orthodoxy became suspect.[4]
Eriugena argues the question of
predestination entirely on speculative grounds, and starts with the bold
affirmation that philosophy and religion are fundamentally one and the same.
Even more significant is his handling of authority and reason. Eriugena offered
a skilled proof that there can be predestination only to the good, for all folk
are summoned to be saints.[4] The work was warmly assailed by
Drepanius Florus, canon of Lyons, and Prudentius, and was condemned by two councils:
that of Valence in 855, and that of Langres in 859. By the former council his arguments
were described as Pultes Scotorum ("Irish porridge") and commentum
diaboli ("an invention of the devil").
Eriugena believed that all people
and all beings, including animals, reflect attributes of God, towards whom all
are capable of progressing and to which all things ultimately must return.[citation needed] Eriugena was a believer in apocatastasis or universal reconciliation,[citation needed] which maintains that the universe will
eventually be restored under God's dominion (see also Christian
Universalism).[9]
·
Translation of Pseudo-Dionysius
At some point in the centuries
before Eriugena a legend had developed that Saint Denis, the first Bishop of Paris and patron saint of the important Abbey
of Saint-Denis, was
the same person as both the Dionysius the Areopagite mentioned in Acts 17.34, and Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, a figure whose writings were not yet being
circulated in the West in the ninth century (it was not until the sixteenth century,
except by Abelard,[citation needed] that it was realised that these two figures
were not connected). Accordingly, in the 820s ambassadors from the Byzantine
emperor to the court of Louis the Pious donated Louis a Greek manuscript of
the Dionysian corpus, which was immediately given to the Abbey of Saint Denis
in the care of Abbot Hilduin. Hilduin proceeded to direct a
translation of the Dionysian corpus from Greek into Latin, based on this single
manuscript.[10]
Soon after, probably by the middle
of the ninth century, Eriugena made a second Latin translation of the Dionysian
corpus, and much later wrote a commentary on "The Celestial
Hierarchy". This constitutes the first major Latin reception of the
Areopagite. It is unclear why Eriugena made a new translation so soon after
Hilduin's. It has often been suggested that Hilduin's translation was
deficient; though this is a possibility, it was a serviceable translation.
Another possibility is that Eriugena's creative energies and his inclination
toward Greek theological subjects motivated him to make a new translation.[11]
Eriugena's next work was a Latin
translation of Dionysius the Areopagite undertaken at the request of Charles
the Bald. This also has been preserved, and fragments of a commentary by
Eriugena on Dionysius have been discovered in manuscript. A translation of the
Areopagite's writings was not likely to alter the opinion already formed as to
Eriugena's orthodoxy. Pope Nicholas I was offended that the work had not
been submitted for approval before being given to the world, and ordered
Charles to send Eriugena to
At the request of the Byzantine
emperor Michael
III (ca. 858), Eriugena
undertook some translation into Latin of the works of Pseudo-Dionysius and added his
own commentary.
With this translation, he was the
first since
He also translated Gregory of Nyssa’s De hominis opificio and Maximus Confessor's Ambigua ad Iohannem.[12]
·
Periphyseon
Main article: De
divisione naturae
Eriugena's great work, De
divisione naturae (On the Division of Nature) or Periphyseon,
which was condemned by a council at Sens by Honorius III (1225), who described it as
"swarming with worms of heretical perversity," and by Gregory XIII in 1585, is arranged in five books.
The form of exposition is that of dialogue; the method of reasoning is the syllogism. Nature (Natura in Latin or physis
in Greek) is the name of the most comprehensive of all unities, that which
contains within itself the most primary division of all things, that which is
(being) and that which is not (nonbeing).
The Latin title refers to these four
divisions of nature: (1) that which creates and is not created; (2) that which
is created and creates; (3) that which is created and does not create; (4) that
which is neither created nor creates. The first is God as the ground or origin
of all things, the last is God as the final end or goal of all things, that
into which the world of created things ultimately returns. The second and third
together compose the created universe, which is the manifestation of God, God in
process, Theophania; the second is the world of Platonic ideas or forms, and the third is a more pantheistic world, or a pandeistic one,[2][13] depending on the interference of
God.
Thus we distinguish in the divine
system beginning, middle and end. These three are in essence one; the
difference is only the consequence of our finite comprehension. We are
compelled to envisage this eternal process under the form of time, to apply
temporal distinctions to that which is extra- or supra-temporal. It is in turn
through our experience that the incomprehensible divine is able to frame an
understanding of itself.
The Division of Nature has been called the final
achievement of ancient philosophy, a work which "synthesizes the
philosophical accomplishments of fifteen centuries." It is presented, like
Alcuin's book, as a dialogue between Master and Pupil. Eriugena anticipates Thomas Aquinas, who said that one cannot know and
believe a thing at the same time. Eriugena explains that reason is necessary to
understand and interpret revelation. "Authority is the source of
knowledge, but the reason of mankind is the norm by which all authority is
judged."[14]
Influence
Eriugena's work is distinguished by
the freedom of his speculation, and the boldness with which he works out his logical or dialectical system of the universe. He marks,
indeed, a stage of transition from the older Platonizing philosophy to the later scholasticism. For him
philosophy is not in the service of theology. The above-quoted assertion as to
the substantial identity between philosophy and religion is repeated almost
word for word by many of the later scholastic writers, but its significance
depends upon the selection of one or other term of the identity as fundamental
or primary. For Eriugena, philosophy or reason is first, primitive; authority
or religion is secondary, derived.
His influence was greater with mystics than with logicians, but he was responsible
for a revival of philosophical thought which had remained largely dormant in
western Europe after the death of Boethius.
After Eriugena another medieval
thinker of significance was Berengar of Tours, professor at the monastic school
in the French city. Berengar believed that truth is obtained through reason
rather than revelation. St. Peter Damian agreed with Tertullian that it is not necessary for people
to philosophize because God has spoken for them. Damian was prior of Fonte Avellana and afterward Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia. He died in 1072. Lanfranc (1005-89) was prior of Bec in
On the whole, one might be surprised
that even in the seventeenth century pantheism did not gain a complete victory
over theism; for the most original, finest, and most thorough European
expositions of it (none of them, of course, will bear comparison with the Upanishads of the Vedas) all came to light at that period, namely
through Bruno, Malebranche, Spinoza, and Scotus Erigena. After Scotus Erigena had
been lost and forgotten for many centuries, he was again discovered at
—Schopenhauer, Parerga and Paralipomena, Vol. I, "Sketch of a History
of the Doctrine of the Ideal and the Real".
Leszek
Kołakowski, a
Polish Marx scholar, has mentioned Eriugena as one of the primary influences on
Hegel's, and therefore Marx's, dialectical form. In particular, he called De
Divisione Naturae a prototype of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit.[15]
Joke
William
of Malmesbury's
humorous anecdote illustrates both the character of Eriugena and the position
he occupied at the French court. The king having asked, Quid distat inter
sottum et Scottum? (What separates a sot [drunkard] from an Irishman?),
Eriugena replied, Tabula tantum (Only a Table).[16]
William of Malmesbury is not considered
a reliable source on John Scotus Eriugena by modern scholars. For example, his
reports that Eriugena is buried at Malmesbury is doubted by scholars who say
that William confused John Eriugena with a different monk named John. William’s
report on the manner of Eriugena’s death, killed by the pens of his students,
also appears to be a legend. “It seems certain that this is due to confusion
with another John and that the manner of John’s death is borrowed from the Acts
of St. Cassian
of Imola. Feast:
(at Malmesbury), 28 January.”[17][18][19]
Legacy
He gives his name to the John
Scottus School in
Bertrand Russell called him "the most
astonishing person of the ninth century".[20] The Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy states he "is the most significant Irish
intellectual of the early monastic period. He is generally recognized to be both
the outstanding philosopher (in terms of originality) of the Carolingian era
and of the whole period of Latin philosophy stretching from Boethius to Anselm".[21]
Works
Translations
· Johannis Scotti Eriugenae Periphyseon: (De divisione
naturae), 3 vols, edited by I. P. Sheldon-Williams, (Dublin:
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1968-1981) [the Latin and English text
of Books 1-3 of De divisione naturae]
· Periphyseon (The Division of Nature),
tr. I. P. Sheldon-Williams and JJ O'Meara, (Montreal: Bellarmin, 1987) [The
Latin text is published in É. Jeauneau, ed, CCCM 161-165.]
· The Voice of the Eagle. The Heart of Celtic
Christianity: John Scotus Eriugena's Homily on the Prologue to the Gospel of
St. John, translated and introduced by Christopher Bamford,
(Hudson, NY: Lindisfarne; Edinburgh: Floris, 1990) [reprinted Great Barrington,
MA: Lindisfarne, 2000)] [translation of Homilia in prologum Sancti Evangelii
secundum Joannem]
· Iohannis Scotti Eriugenae Periphyseon (De divisione
naturae), edited by Édouard A. Jeauneau; translated into
English by John J. O'Meara and I.P. Sheldon-Williams, (Dublin: School of Celtic
Studies, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1995) [the Latin and English
text of Book 4 of De divisione naturae]
· Glossae divinae historiae: the Biblical glosses of
John Scottus Eriugena, edited by John J. Contreni and Pádraig P. Ó Néill,
(Firenze: SISMEL Edizioni del Galluzzo, 1997)
· Treatise on divine predestination,
translated by Mary Brennan, (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press,
1998) [translation of De divina praedestinatione liber.]
· A Thirteenth-Century Textbook of Mystical Theology at
the University of Paris: the Mystical Theology of Dionysius the Areopagite in
Eriugena's Latin Translation, with the Scholia translated by Anastasius the
Librarian, and Excerpts from Eriugena's Periphyseon,
translated and introduced by L. Michael Harrington, Dallas medieval texts and
translations 4, (Paris; Dudley, MA: Peeters, 2004)
· Paul Rorem, Eriugena’s Commentary on the Dionysian
Celestial Hierarchy, (
See also
· Neoplatonism and Christianity
References
1. Moran, Dermot. "John Scottus Eriugena". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
2. Max Bernhard
Weinstein, Welt- und
Lebensanschauungen, Hervorgegangen aus Religion, Philosophie und
Naturerkenntnis ("World and Life Views, Emerging From Religion,
Philosophy and Nature") (1910), page 283-84: "Johannes Scotus
Erigena.... läßt in einer seiner mehreren Ansichten alles von Gott emaniert
sein. Gottes Klarheit, welche mit Recht auch Dunkelheit genannt wird, breite
sich über alles aus. Die ungeformte Materie soll nur das Unendliche bedeuten,
welches, da es formlos sei, alle Formen in sich enthalte. Gott hat die Welt aus
seinem eigenen Wesen gebildet. Jedes Geschöpf ist eine Theophanie, ein
Sichoffenbarmachen Gottes. Gott sei an sich vorhanden wie ein Gedanke im
Menschen bestehe; er manifestiere sich in der Welt durch sich selbst, wie ein
Gedanke, der sich denkt, sich selbst zur Erkenntnis komme. So sei Gott ohne die
Welt absolut negativ. Es klingt wie eine Blasphemie, wenn gesagt wird, Gott
wisse nicht, was er sei, und er werde erst geschaffen mit der Schöpfung, indem
er sich in seiner Schöpfung offenbart, die Schöpfung so aus Nichts
hervorbringend. Das ist auch fast so abstrakt wie die indische Tad-Anschauung.
Freilich bleibt es bei diesem absoluten, und ja auch nicht zu durchdringenden,
Pandeismus nicht. Wie der Indier muß Scotus Gott doch etwas zuschreiben,
Willen, und die Geschöpfe sind dann Willensakte. Der Wille ist persönlich als
Emanation Gottes (als Christus) gedacht, wie wohl auch die Ursachen (zusammengefaßt
als Heiliger Geist), die Scotus von Gott ausgehen läßt, Emanationen sind, und
die Wirkungen, die wieder von ihnen ausgehen, Emanationen ihrer selbst
darstellen."
3.
Harper, Douglas. "scot". Online Etymology
Dictionary.
4.
Freemantle, Anne, ed. (1954-1955), "John
Scotus Erigena", The Age of Belief, The Mentor
Philosophers, Houghton Mifflin Company, pp. 72-87.
5.
Caribine, Deirdre, Great Medieval Thinkers, John
Scottus Eriugena,
6.
Cappuyns, M (1933), Jean Scot Érigène, sa vie,
son oeuvre, sa pensée,
7.
The nineteenth-century French
historian, Hauréau advanced some
reasons for fixing this date.
8.
Dermot Moran, The Philosophy
of John Scottus Eriugena: A Study of Idealism in the Middle Ages,
9.
"Johannes Scotus Erigena", Notable Names Database, retrieved 5
August 2007.
10.
Paul Rorem, 'The Early Latin Dionysius:
Eriugena and Hugh of St Victor’, "Modern Theology" 24:4, (2008), p.
602.
11.
Paul Rorem, ‘The Early Latin
Dionysius: Eriugena and Hugh of St Victor’, "Modern Theology" 24:4,
(2008), p602.
12.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scottus-eriugena/
13.
Jean-Jacques Gabut, Origines et fondements spirituels et sociologiques de
la maçonnerie écossaise, 2017: Par
ailleurs, un certain panthéisme, ou plutôt « pandéisme », se dégage
de son œuvre où l'inspiration néoplatonicienne complète parfaitement la stricte
orthodoxie chrétienne. ("Moreover, a certain pantheism, or rather pandeism,
emerges from his work where Neo-Platonic inspiration perfectly complements the
strict Christian orthodoxy."
14.
The Age of Belief, cit., p. 80
15.
Kołakowski, L (1976), Main Currents of Marxism, 1.
16.
William of Malmesbury. "Book
5". Gesta pontificum Anglorum.Quoted in Helen Waddell, The Wandering
Scholars (Garden City: Doubleday,
1955), p. 56.
17.
‘John the Sage, mentioned in
R.P.S. (11th century) as resting at Malmesbury with Maedub and Aldhelm. He
should probably be identified with the John whose tomb William of Malmesbury
described and whose epitaph he transcribed. He believed that this was John Scotus
Eriugena, the Irish philosopher of the 9th century, and that he was killed by
the pens of his students after settling at Malmesbury. It seems certain that
this is due to confusion with another John and that the manner of John’s death
is borrowed from the Acts of St. Cassian of Imola. Feast: (at Malmesbury), 28
January .’ “John the Sage” The
18.
”Today (28 January) we
commemorate
19.
[William wrote] ‘that John
quitted Francia because of the charge of erroneous doctrine brought against
him. He came to King Alfred, by whom he was welcomed and established as a
teacher at Malmesbury, but after some years he was assailed by the boys, was
later translated to the left of the high altar of the abbey church, chiefly as the
result of whom he taught, with their styles, and so died. It never occurred to
any one to identify the Old Saxon abbat of Athelney with the Irish teacher of
Malmesbury—with the name John as the single point in common—until the late
forger, who passed off his work as that of Ingulf, who was abbat of Croyland
towards the end of the eleventh century (‘Descr. Comp.’ in Rer. Angl. Script.
post Bedam, p. 870,
20.
https://archive.org/details/TheHistoryOfWesternPhilosophy
21.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scottus-eriugena/
Sources
·
This
article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Erigena, Johannes Scotus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge
University Press. pp. 742-744.
Further reading
· Jeauneau, Édouard (1979), "Jean Scot Érigène et
le Grec", Bulletin du Cange: Archivvm Latinitatis Medii Aevi, Leiden: EJ
Brill, MCMLXXVII-III. Tome XLI. [This
argues that Eriugena's knowledge of Greek was not completely thorough.]
· Paul Rorem. "The Early Latin Dionysius: Eriugena
and Hugh of St Victor." Modern Theology 24:4, (2008).
· John MacInnis. "'The Harmony of All Things':
Music, Soul, and Cosmos in the Writings of John Scottus Eriugena.” PhD diss., Florida
State University, 2014.
External links
· Moran, Dermot. "John Scottus Eriugena". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
·
Works by John Scotus Eriugena at Open Library
·
Eriugena: Dialectic and Ontology in the Periphyseon, Ontology.
·
Complete List of the Editions and Translations of the Works of Eriugena, Ontology.
·
"A-J", Bibliography on Eriugena's Philosophical Work, Ontology.
·
"K-Z", Bibliography on Eriugena's Philosophical Work, Ontology.
· Opera Omnia by
Migne Patrologia Latina with analytical indexes, EU: Documenta Catholica omnia.
· John 31 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England.
· John Scotus and "John the Sophist", Elfinspell.
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