Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
  • Register
  • Login
  • Language
    • Deutsch
    • English
    • Español (España)
    • Français (France)
    • Italiano
    • Język Polski
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Scientific Council
    • Reviewers
    • Review process
    • Open Access Policy
    • Ethical Standards
    • Article Processing Charges and Submission Charges
    • Privacy Statement
    • Archiving policy
    • Contact
  • Register
  • Login
  • Language:
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español (España)
  • Français (France)
  • Italiano
  • Język Polski

Scientia et Fides

Humility, Courage, Magnanimity: a Thomistic Account
  • Home
  • /
  • Humility, Courage, Magnanimity: a Thomistic Account
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Vol. 10 No. 2 (2022): Intellectual virtues for interdisciplinary research in Science and the Big Questions /
  4. Articles

Humility, Courage, Magnanimity: a Thomistic Account

Authors

  • Eleonore Stump Saint Louis University https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6983-5562

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12775/SetF.2022.016

Keywords

Aquinas, humility, courage, magnanimity

Abstract

In these brief remarks, I sketch Aquinas’s account of humility, courage, and magnanimity. The nature of humility for Aquinas emerges nicely from his account of pride, and it also illuminates Aquinas’s view of magnanimity. For Aquinas, pride is the worst of the vices, and it comes in four kinds. The opposite of all these kinds of pride in a person is his disposition to accept that the excellences he has are all gifts from a good God and are all meant to be given back by being shared with others. Aquinas believes that all the virtues come together as a set. Consequently, a person who has humility also has courage. Aquinas takes the deepest kind of courage as a gift of the Holy Spirit. On his view, taken as a gift, courage manifests itself in a disposition to act on the settled conviction that one will be united to God in heaven when one dies. It is not easy to see how magnanimity could be a virtue if humility is. The solution is to see that for Aquinas the honor for the Christian virtue of magnanimity is not honor from human beings but honor from God. A person can have the virtue of humility and still strive for the greatest honors, as Aquinas sees it. The conclusion of Aquinas’s account of humility, courage, and magnanimity is this: it is morally obligatory to go for glory, because glory is a matter of being honored by God as faithful.

References

Alighieri, Dante. 1989. La Divina Commedia. Inferno. A cura di Natalio Sapegno. Trento: Mondadori.

Aristotle. 1941. Nicomachean Ethics. Trans: W. D. Ross, in The Basic Works of Aristotle, edited by Richard McKeon, 935–1126. New York: Random House.

Aquinas. 1947. Summa Theologica, 3 vols. Trans: Fathers of the English Dominican Province. New York: Benziger Brothers.

Bommarito, Nicolas. 2018. Modesty and Humility. In The Standford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by Edward N. Zalta. URL = <https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2018/entries/modesty-humility/>.

Button, Mark. 2005. “«A Monkish Kind of Virtue»”? For and Against Humility.” Political Theory 33 (6): 840–868. doi: 10.1177/0090591705280525.

Marenbon, John. 2019. “Magnanimity, Christian Ethics, and Paganism in the Latin Middle Ages.” In The Measure of Greatness: Philosophers on Magnanimity, edited by Sophia Vasalou, 88–116. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Pine, Gregory. 2019. “Magnanimity and Humility according to St. Thomas Aquinas.” The Thomist: A Speculative Quarterly Review 82 (2): 263–286. doi: 10.1353/tho.2018.0014.

Robert, C. Roberts, and W. Scott Cleveland. 2017. “Humility from a Philosophical Point of View.” In Handbook of humility. Theory, research, and applications, edited by Everett L. Worthington, Don E. Davis and Joshua N. Hook, 33–46. London: Routledge.

Stump, Eleonore. 2018. Atonement. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Scientia et Fides

Downloads

  • PDF

Published

2022-12-07

How to Cite

1.
STUMP, Eleonore. Humility, Courage, Magnanimity: a Thomistic Account. Scientia et Fides. Online. 7 December 2022. Vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 23-29. [Accessed 24 May 2025]. DOI 10.12775/SetF.2022.016.
  • ISO 690
  • ACM
  • ACS
  • APA
  • ABNT
  • Chicago
  • Harvard
  • IEEE
  • MLA
  • Turabian
  • Vancouver
Download Citation
  • Endnote/Zotero/Mendeley (RIS)
  • BibTeX

Issue

Vol. 10 No. 2 (2022): Intellectual virtues for interdisciplinary research in Science and the Big Questions

Section

Articles

License

Copyright (c) 2022 Eleonore Stump

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

CC BY ND 4.0. The Creator/Contributor is the Licensor, who grants the Licensee a non-exclusive license to use the Work on the fields indicated in the License Agreement.

  • The Licensor grants the Licensee a non-exclusive license to use the Work/related rights item specified in § 1 within the following fields: a) recording of Work/related rights item; b) reproduction (multiplication) of Work/related rights item in print and digital technology (e-book, audiobook); c) placing the copies of the multiplied Work/related rights item on the market; d) entering the Work/related rights item to computer memory; e) distribution of the work in electronic version in the open access form on the basis of Creative Commons license (CC BY-ND 3.0) via the digital platform of the Nicolaus Copernicus University Press and file repository of the Nicolaus Copernicus University.
  • Usage of the recorded Work by the Licensee within the above fields is not restricted by time, numbers or territory.
  • The Licensor grants the license for the Work/related rights item to the Licensee free of charge and for an unspecified period of time.

FULL TEXT License Agreement

Stats

Number of views and downloads: 1088
Number of citations: 0

ISSN/eISSN

ISSN: 2300-7648

eISSN: 2353-5636

Search

Search

Browse

  • Browse Author Index
  • Issue archive

User

User

Current Issue

  • Atom logo
  • RSS2 logo
  • RSS1 logo

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians

Newsletter

Subscribe Unsubscribe

Language

  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español (España)
  • Français (France)
  • Italiano
  • Język Polski

Tags

Search using one of provided tags:

Aquinas, humility, courage, magnanimity
Up

Akademicka Platforma Czasopism

Najlepsze czasopisma naukowe i akademickie w jednym miejscu

apcz.umk.pl

Partners

  • Akademia Ignatianum w Krakowie
  • Akademickie Towarzystwo Andragogiczne
  • Fundacja Copernicus na rzecz Rozwoju Badań Naukowych
  • Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla Polskiej Akademii Nauk
  • Instytut Kultur Śródziemnomorskich i Orientalnych PAN
  • Instytut Tomistyczny
  • Karmelitański Instytut Duchowości w Krakowie
  • Ministerstwo Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego
  • Państwowa Akademia Nauk Stosowanych w Krośnie
  • Państwowa Akademia Nauk Stosowanych we Włocławku
  • Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Zawodowa im. Stanisława Pigonia w Krośnie
  • Polska Fundacja Przemysłu Kosmicznego
  • Polskie Towarzystwo Ekonomiczne
  • Polskie Towarzystwo Ludoznawcze
  • Towarzystwo Miłośników Torunia
  • Towarzystwo Naukowe w Toruniu
  • Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
  • Uniwersytet Komisji Edukacji Narodowej w Krakowie
  • Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika
  • Uniwersytet w Białymstoku
  • Uniwersytet Warszawski
  • Wojewódzka Biblioteka Publiczna - Książnica Kopernikańska
  • Wyższe Seminarium Duchowne w Pelplinie / Wydawnictwo Diecezjalne „Bernardinum" w Pelplinie

© 2021- Nicolaus Copernicus University Accessibility statement Shop