RT Article T1 A Contemporary Aristotelian–Thomistic Perspective on the Evolutionary View of Reality and Theistic Evolution JF Religions VO 15 IS 5 A1 Tabaczek, Mariusz 1980- LA English YR 2024 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1886969620 AB This article presents a coherent and comprehensive proposal of a renewed contemporary Aristotelian–Thomistic approach to the evolutionary view of reality and the position of theistic evolution. Beginning with a proposal of a hylomorphically–grounded essentialist definition of species—framed within a broader revival of biological essentialism—a constructive model of the Aristotelian–Thomistic metaphysics of evolution is being offered, together with a reflection on the alleged violation of the principle of proportionate causation in evolutionary transitions and the role of teleology and chance in evolution. The theological part of the article addresses a number of questions concerning the Thomistic school of theology in its encounter with the evolutionary worldview, including the question of whether God creates through evolution, the query concerning the concurrence of divine and created causes in evolutionary transitions, and the question regarding evolutionary and theological notions of anthropogenesis. A list of ten postulates grounding a contemporary Thomistic version of theistic evolution is offered as a conclusion to the research presented in the text. K1 theistic evolution K1 Teleology K1 speciation K1 proportionate causation K1 Hylomorphism K1 Evolution K1 Divine Action K1 Creation K1 Chance K1 Aristotle K1 Aquinas K1 anthropogenesis DO 10.3390/rel15050524