The Racial Pride of Pagan Virtue: Augustine, Aquinas, and the Amerindians in the Spanish Atlantic Empire

Recent retrievals of Thomas Aquinas on pagan political virtue have generated creative commentary and exegesis for Christian ethics. This article examines the retrieval of pagan virtue discourse among sixteenth-century Spanish humanists and theologians who inhabited the Spanish Atlantic empire and de...

Full description

Saved in:  
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lantigua, David M. 1981- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
Published: 2025
In: The Thomist
Year: 2025, Volume: 89, Issue: 2, Pages: 263-302
IxTheo Classification:CC Christianity and Non-Christian religion; Inter-religious relations
KAB Church history 30-500; early Christianity
KAE Church history 900-1300; high Middle Ages
KAH Church history 1648-1913; modern history
KBH Iberian Peninsula
KBR Latin America
KDB Roman Catholic Church
NBE Anthropology
NCA Ethics
Further subjects:B natural slavery
B Salamanca
B Greed
B civic good
B Charity
B Virtue Ethics
B Humanism
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Description
Summary:Recent retrievals of Thomas Aquinas on pagan political virtue have generated creative commentary and exegesis for Christian ethics. This article examines the retrieval of pagan virtue discourse among sixteenth-century Spanish humanists and theologians who inhabited the Spanish Atlantic empire and debated the “affair of the Indies.” The historical turn to the New World conquests demonstrates how the racial pride endemic to classical pagan virtue became a matter of dispute pitting an Aristotelian ethic of magnanimity against a Thomistic ethic of charity. The interpretive dispute about pagan virtue between the Spanish humanist Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda and Spanish Dominican theologians concerned whether Augustine’s City of God presented the Roman Empire as a model for heroic virtue or a tyranny of splendid vice. This article considers the distinct political uses of pagan virtue in medieval and early modern political thought with focus on the opposition to the natural racial hierarchy of pagan political virtue by Dominicans Bartolomé de las Casas, Melchor Cano, and Domingo de Soto. Their Thomistic approach with legal and humanist inflections, at once capaciously Aristotelian yet critically Augustinian, further conceptualizes pagan virtue for contemporary Christian ethics and points toward more theological approaches to racial justice and racial solidarity.
ISSN:2473-3725
Contains:Enthalten in: The Thomist
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1353/tho.2025.a954782