Nineteenth- and early twentieth-century scholars of medieval Christian thought often understood there to be two basic philosophical systems at play in the long middle ages:Footnote 1 an Aristotelian philosophy traced back to the works of Aristotle and his introduction/re-introduction to Christian thought through Boethius, the great Arabic thinkers, and certain academic developments in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries; and a Platonic/Neo-Platonic tradition that originated with the Greek patristic theologians, and worked its way through Augustine, the Pseudo-Dionysius, and certain streams of ‘non-Aristotelian’ philosophy.Footnote 2 This narrative was often presented, or made manifest, through basic genealogies that traced Christian Platonism through Augustine, Anselm, Richard of St. Victor, Bonaventure, Henry of Ghent, et al., and Christian Aristotelianism through Boethius, Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, Boethius of Dacia, et al. Further, it sometimes proved tempting to locate the two great ‘rivaling’ mendicant orders—i.e., the Franciscans and Dominicans—within these competing philosophical traditions. Afterall, is it not the case that Bonaventure is basically ‘Platonic’ and Thomas is an unapologetic ‘Aristotelian’? The present paper will focus on the theology of the Dominican theologian Robert Holcot, and the ways in which his Trinitarian theology complicates one such narrative.
The late nineteenth-century French Jesuit, Théodore de Régnon, argued in the second volume of his Études that there are two traditions of medieval Trinitarian theology that are grounded in two opposed metaphysical theories: a Neo-Platonic position that is dynamic and an Aristotelian position that is static.Footnote 3 This thesis is explored primarily through an analysis of the writings of Bonaventure and Thomas Aquinas, and de Régnon interprets the theology of Bonaventure as grounded in the Platonic and Neo-Platonic tradition transmitted through the theology of Pseudo-Dionysius. According to de Régnon, Bonaventure inherited this Dionysian metaphysics—D'une métaphysicque ‘dynamique’—from Alexander of Hales.Footnote 4 The theology of Thomas Aquinas, by contrast, is understood to be grounded in the works of Aristotle: a philosophy that, according to de Régnon, is fundamentally ‘static’ (statique).Footnote 5 In particular, the theory of the categories—so central to Thomas’ (and Augustine's) account of the divine relations—he defines as static and, by definition, consiste dans l'immobilité.Footnote 6 The result is that de Régnon develops a genetic account according to which Pseudo-Dionysius, Richard of St. Victor, William of Auverne, William of Auxerre, Alexander of Hales, and Bonaventure supported a dynamic account of the Trinity as grounded in a Platonic or Neo-Platonic philosophy, while Augustine, Anselm of Canterbury, Peter Lombard, Albert the Great, and Thomas Aquinas developed a Trinitarian theology grounded in a fundamentally ‘static’ Aristotelian philosophy. The work of de Régnon would go on to have a substantial influence on how medieval Trinitarian theology was understood in the twentieth century.Footnote 7
There is much one could unpack here by way of criticism: what does de Régnon mean by dynamic and static? How does he justify such a genealogy, when, e.g., Richard of St. Victor, William of Auvergne, and William of Auxerre support fundamentally opposed Trinitarian theologies? For the time being we will have to set aside such questions. Our focus in the present paper will be on how this two-model approach to the material fails to capture the developments of Trinitarian theology in the first half of the fourteenth century, and the ways in which an emphasis on a ‘Franciscan model’ and a ‘Dominican model’ fails to grasp the theology of the Dominican Robert Holcot. In what follows I will argue that Holcot's Trinitarian theology is grounded in the Franciscan theologian William of Ockham's Summa logicae, a work that also influenced Ockham's Franciscan colleague, Walter Chatton.Footnote 8 What emerges, we will see, is a form of Trinitarian theology that is neither ‘Franciscan’ nor ‘Dominican’—as these categories are traditionally understood—and forces us to abandon, I think, a two model or two narrative approach to the development of medieval Trinitarian theology.Footnote 9 I begin with Ockham's Summa logicae and a discussion of the various competing models of Trinitarian theology in the early fourteenth century, before examining the reception of Ockham's thought in Holcot.
I. The Summa Logicae: A Theological Textbook
William of Ockham's most systematic or thorough presentation of Trinitarian theology is found in his commentary on the Lombard's Sentences and in his quodlibetal questions.Footnote 10 However, Ockham also treats Trinitarian questions in his Summa logicae. The present discussion examines where Ockham's Trinitarian theology fits within the development of fourteenth-century theology as presented in the Summa logicae.
Ockham and Trinitarian Minimalism
In his commentary on Peter Lombard's Sentences, Ockham argues that there are four opinions regarding the distinction of persons: (1) they are distinguished in and of themselves; (2) they are distinguished by real relations; (3) they are distinguished by absolute properties and quasi secondarily through relations; and (4) they are distinguished by absolute properties.Footnote 11 The first opinion, sometimes referred to as Praepositinianism, or Trinitarian minimalism, is the view that the persons are distinct in and of themselves (se ipsis), and that no explanatory model is necessary to account for personal distinction.Footnote 12 The second opinion encapsulates both models of the ‘two-model’ approach— i.e., the Franciscan model and the Dominican model— and argues that the persons are distinct by means of real relations, such that each person has a unique personal property by means of which it is distinct from the other two divine persons (e.g., the Father has paternity, and the Son does not). Now, this view is divided into two sub-species of the relations account, in that: (2a) the ‘Franciscans’ tended to argue that only disparate relations are necessary to distinguish the persons; and (2b) the ‘Dominicans’ tended to argue that opposed relations are required to sufficiently distinguish the persons.Footnote 13 The third opinion holds that the persons are distinguished by means of absolute properties and secondarily by means of relation. This view was held, I would argue, by William of Auvergne, who maintained that relations are not sufficient to distinguish anything (as relations are never primary, but require or assume an absolute thing that is in relation). William, as such, held that there is some absolute thing prior to the divine relations, and that the relations are supervenient (istae relationes supervenerint) on this absolute thing.Footnote 14 Finally, the fourth view, which was at times supported by John Duns Scotus, holds that the persons are distinct by individual personal properties, albeit non-relational personal properties. Scotus, it seems, supported an account of the absolute persons view, though he would ultimately reject it for reasons of authority.Footnote 15
In the Ordinatio, Ockham located himself within the second opinion in support of a modified relations account (though, as argued below, he waffled a bit even here).Footnote 16 In particular, Ockham defended the claim that the essence and the personal property of a respective divine person constitute the person, and that there is some kind of formal non-identity, or formal distinction, between the essence and persons/personal properties. For Ockham, things are formally distinct if contradictories can be predicated of one thing, such as the Father — e.g., the Father is both communicable with respect to essence, and incommunicable with respect to the individuation from the Son and Holy Spirit.Footnote 17 That said, he is willing to entertain other positions and even writes that ‘although the fourth opinion could be seen to be probable’ the authority of the Saints seem to expressly favor relations in the divinity.Footnote 18 Thus, Ockham seems to think that for reasons of authority one should favor the relations account. However, as the late Marilyn McCord Adams insightfully observed, ‘off hand, one would expect … Ockham's nominalistic conceptualism to make him receptive to Praepositinus's proposal that the Divine persons are distinguished in and of themselves’ [option 1 above]. Afterall, ‘doesn't Praepositinus in effect simply apply Ockham's nominalistic conceptualism to the Divine case’?Footnote 19 Here, Adams has—seemingly without knowing it—anticipated what one finds in Ockham's Summa logicae.
The theological position Ockham defends in the Summa logicae is one that anticipates the development of the renewal of Trinitarian minimalism that one finds in the theology Walter Chatton, Robert Holcot, and Gregory of Rimini.Footnote 20 This view, often associated with the theology of Praepositinus of Cremona, states that the divine persons are distinct in and of themselves, such that there is no need for further appeal to some distinguishing personal property (e.g., paternitas, filiatio, spiratio activa, or spiratio passiva). However, it remains unclear how one should read Ockham, given that his position in the Summa logicae indicates a more radical account of Trinitarian minimalism than one finds in his previous writings. That said, there is no doubt that in the Summa Ockham develops a Trinitarian grammar that would be systematically employed by those who would deny any kind of explanation for how the divine persons are distinct. This is evident, for example, in Robert Holcot's Trinitarian theology. Here I examine the Summa logicae before turning to Holcot.
Amphibolic Propositions and the Divine Essence
William of Ockham lectured on the Sentences of Peter Lombard in 1317–1318 and held his seven quodlibets at London between 1322 and 1324 (perhaps revising them in Avignon up through 1325).Footnote 21 His Summa logicae, which was written sometime between 1323 and 1325, is therefore one of his final non-political theological works. In the introductory letter, Ockham states that the work is intended for students of theology who often do not have a proper foundation in logic.Footnote 22 The work, therefore, is to provide an introduction to logic for students of theology, as well as other sciences, so that through the proper training in logic they can avoid many errors.
In Summa logicae III-4 William Ockham examines amphibolies (amphiboliae)— syntactically ambiguous sentences—as a subcategory of the fallacies of diction. Ockham argues that there are three distinct modes of amphibolies and our attention here is on the second mode.Footnote 23 Ockham defines the second mode as occurring ‘when a proposition is taken only in one way in its proper (proprie) sense and according to its primary meaning or imposition but can be understood differently and can have another meaning when understood improperly (improprie) and in a secondary sense’.Footnote 24 To clarify, Ockham provides the following proposition as an example: ‘he sells oil’ (iste vendit oleum). This proposition means primarily and properly that a person is a seller of a certain type of viscous liquid. However, in its secondary and improper sense—when speaking colloquially, as the case may be—this proposition means that a person is a swindler.Footnote 25 And, as Ockham notes, the meaning of such propositions is established ‘by the usage of the speakers (ex usu loquientium) who substitute one proposition for another’.Footnote 26
While the second mode of amphiboly occurs regularly in everyday speech, Ockham is focused on theological examples, beginning with a discussion of the divine attributes and transitioning into Trinitarian theology. First, he lists the follow propositions as examples of problematic amphibolies that one finds in the writings of the theologiansFootnote 27:
He states that ‘in these propositions an expression is used that points to a distinction between that for which the subject supposits and that for which the predicate supposits’.Footnote 28 In the first premise, for example, there is an implied distinction between that for which the subject (i.e., Deus) supposits and that for which the predicate (i.e., iustitiam) supposits, such that the premise seems to indicate that there is a distinction between God and His justice (as if justice is something God has that is distinct from Himself).
Ockham's answer to this problem is that such amphibolies need to be distinguished, since they can be taken both properly (proprie) and improperly (improprie). If understood proprie, these propositions are false because they imply a distinction where, in fact, there is none. However, if such propositions are understood improprie, they are true. Understood improprie, Ockham argues, the propositions are true and are understood asFootnote 29:
In the writings of the theologians, therefore, one must distinguish between the proprie and improprie understanding of such amphibolies. Theologically the problem is that such propositions understood proprie violate the absolute simplicity of the divine nature by predicating (Deus habet X) some kind of distinction between the divine essence and the divine attributes. Ockham supports his interpretation by observing a similar passage in Anselm's Monologion, where the Archbishop of Canterbury writes that one should not say that the highest nature has justice (habet iustitiam) but rather is justice (exsistit iustitia).Footnote 30
Amphibolic Propositions and the Divine Trinity
Having discussed amphibolic propositions with respect to the divine essence, Ockham turns his attention to Trinitarian propositions. We begin, accordingly, with a lengthy passage examining Trinitarian amphibolies. Ockham writes:
Likewise, according to one opinion which holds that the divine persons are totally indistinct from the divine essence and from the relations, these propositions need to be distinguished: ‘The Father has Paternity’, ‘Paternity is constitutive of the Father’, ‘Filiation is a property of the Son’, ‘Essence and passive spiration constitute the Holy Spirit’, and innumerable similar propositions: insofar as they can be taken properly, they are false according to this opinion, insofar as it is denoted from this first meaning that the Father is distinct from paternity and from the divine essence and the Son is distinct from filiation. This is the case, since if this were not denoted, then it could be properly said that the Father has paternity and that the Father is constitutive of the Father just as paternity is constitutive of the Father. Strictly speaking, such propositions seem false to many who think this way. Otherwise, these propositions can be understood improperly, that is, in the way that follows: ‘The Father is paternity’, ‘The Father is the divine essence’, ‘The Son is filiation’, and so for the others, and so they are true. In short, then, according to this opinion, every proposition by which, strictly speaking, it is denoted that the Father is to be distinguished from deity or filiation, or the Holy Spirit is to be distinguished from the divine essence or spiration, this is strictly speaking false, although it can be true, if taken improperly.Footnote 31
Here Ockham states that if one holds that the divine persons are totally indistinct from the divine essence and the divine persons, there are various propositions that must be examined and treated with special care. The propositions he identifies as problematic are as followsFootnote 32:
As with the amphibolies regarding the divine essence, Ockham argues that these propositions are false if understood properly (proprie). That is, if one understands by the proposition ‘the Father has paternity’ that the Father is distinct from paternity or the divine essence, it is false. If this were not the case, he argues, one could denote by such propositions that the Father has something distinct called paternity.
The problem, Ockham argues, is that Trinitarian propositions that include verbs such as ‘to have’ (habere) or ‘is constitutive [of]’ (est constitutiva) often imply a distinction—understood proprie and in the primary sense—that is not appropriate to the divine nature. In the proposition ‘the Father has paternity’ (Pater habet paternitatem) there is an implied distinction between that for which the subject (i.e., Pater) supposits and that for which the predicate (i.e., paternitatem) supposits. However, if there is no distinction between the divine persons and the divine essence and the relations, it is not proper to imply a distinction between the Father and paternity.
The Trinitarian amphibolies discussed above can be understood improperly (improprie) and in a secondary sense, however, such that they are understood as not containing theological errors. For example:
In these examples there is a strict identity between the persons and their respective personal properties, as well as between the Father and the essence. For Ockham, therefore, the original propositions can be understood as true theological statements if they are interpreted as not positing unnecessary distinctions within the one God.
The conclusion, here, is that in the Summa logicae Ockham explores a variant of Trinitarian minimalism that is entirely consistent with his broader philosophical agenda (as Marilyn McCord Adams pointed out). Further, it is a position that Ockham supports as a faithful reading of Augustine and Anselm, even if it goes against the prevailing traditions of Trinitarian theology in the early decades of the fourteenth century. It what follows, I turn to Robert Holcot's Trinitarian theology and his defense of Trinitarian minimalism.
II. Robert Holcot and the Summa logicae
Robert Holcot's Trinitarian theology has received little direct attention by modern scholars.Footnote 33 Unfortunately, part of the problem has been that Holcot's texts have not been accessible outside of manuscripts, incunabula, and early modern editions.Footnote 34 However, like Ockham, there are other reasons why Holcot's Trinitarian theology has been neglected: first and foremost has been the general assumption that Holcot, following Ockham, defends a strict break between theology and philosophy (faith and reason) such that he presents a fideistic account of the divine Trinity. In fact, many authors have argued that the break between faith and reason that Ockham brings about is brought to its logical conclusion in the writings of Holcot. Thus, before examining Holcot's Trinitarian theology, I begin here with Philotheus Boehner's argument that Holcot's Trinitarian theology diverges radically from the theology of William of Ockham.
Philotheus Boehner, the Summa logicae, and Robert Holcot
The Franciscan, Philotheus Boehner, published an article in 1944 arguing —based on a comparison between Ockham's known theological works and the, at the time anonymous, Centiloquium—that the Venerable Inceptor was not the author of the latter.Footnote 35 The Centiloquium is an anonymous work of the early fourteenth century that, for many authors such as Etienne Gilson,Footnote 36 epitomized the bifurcation of faith and reason initiated by Duns Scotus and William of Ockham. Throughout the course of the article, Boehner argued that Ockham employed John Duns Scotus's formal distinction (distinctio formalis) in Trinitarian theology to ‘safeguard the principle of contradiction’.Footnote 37 In the concluding section of the paper Boehner considers the question of the authorship of the Centiloquium and argues that:
Holkot represents the furthest point of development from the Scotistic and Ockhamistic solution. For this so-called Ockhamist…denies the distinctio formalis in any sense, and also denies the formal character of Logic…it follows that the historical position of the author of the Centiloquium is not in the neighborhood of Ockham, but rather in the neighborhood of Holkot.Footnote 38
Boehner maintains, therefore, that Ockham and Holcot develop radically distinct accounts of the divine Trinity given their acceptance and rejection of the distinctio formalis respectively. On this reading, Ockham's Trinitarian theology is rather closer to that of the Subtle Doctor than to Robert Holcot or the author of the much-maligned Centiloquium.
The present argument diverges from the thesis of Boehner and argues that Ockham's Summa logicae is evidence that Ockham, at least in this final philosophical/theological work, defended a Trinitarian theology that in many ways anticipated the minimalist theories of thinkers such as Walter Chatton, Robert Holcot, and Gregory of Rimini. This is evident in Ockham's account of Trinitarian amphibolies in the Summa logicae, where he avoids any discussion of a distinctio formalis between the persons and their respective personal properties, or between the persons and the divine essence.Footnote 39 Thus, instead of looking at Ockham in comparison to Duns Scotus, the present argument will defend the thesis that Ockham's later Trinitarian theology—particularly as developed in the Summa logicae—should be understood as a return, among several fourteenth-century theologians, to the minimalist theology of Praepositinus of Cremona. In what follows we will consider two themes that were central to the development of Trinitarian minimalism: the distinction of persons, and the constitution of persons.
The Divine Essence and the Distinction of Persons
Holcot's Trinitarian theology is consistent with the position Ockham defends in Summa logicae, III-4, cap.6. Ockham had argued, as we have seen, that statements such as Pater est paternitas or Pater est essentia should never be understood as indicating a distinction (of any kind) between the Pater and the personal property paternitas. Such propositions, he reminds us, are found in the writings of the Fathers, but should be avoided. The implications of this view are such that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not understood to be distinct by means of some individuating personal property (e.g., paternitas or filiatio) that is, even minimally, distinct from the persons themselves. However, this means that according to the view defended in the Summa logicae, the persons are their respective personal properties and are simply distinct in and of themselves. This is the position developed by Walter Chatton and Robert Holcot in the decade following the completion of the Summa logicae.
Robert Holcot argues that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are distinct in and of themselves (se ipsis). Thus, it is not the case that the Father is distinct from the Son because the Father has some minimally distinct personal property (paternitas) that distinguishes him from the Son, who has Sonship (filiatio). Because Pater est paternitas and Filius est filiatio, it logically follows that—barring the predication of another minimally distinct property—the Father and Son, if distinct, are distinct in and of themselves. This, as we shall see, is Holcot's position.
The previous scholastic tradition had developed various strategies for analyzing the distinction between the divine essence and the individual divine persons. The Fourth Lateran Council had argued that there was not a real distinction between the divine essence and the divine relations or divine persons.Footnote 40 This conciliar decision was necessary, of course, to guard against the idea that there could be some ‘fourth thing’ in the Trinity (the divine essence, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit). In response, theologians posited various types of distinction between the divine essence and the relations (the individuating personal properties) that conceptually were somewhere between a real distinction and a merely conceptual distinction; a conceptual distinction being a logical distinction imposed by the mind that does not exist in the object per se. Holcot famously rejects all such distinctions, arguing that ‘essence and relation in God cannot be distinguished really, modally, formally, rationally, convertibly, nor in any other way’.Footnote 41 However, his arguments for such a position are instructive and worth examining in detail.
Holcot argues that the following statements should not be conceded if read literally (de virtute sermonis):
The reason he gives is that the verb sunt is plural in number and as such consignifies (consignifcat) that there are two distinct things, i.e., an essence distinct from a relation.Footnote 42 Similarly, Holcot writes that with respect to Marcus Tullius Cicero it is false to state that ‘Marcus and Tullius are’ (Marcus et Tullius sunt) because, again, the verb sunt is plural in number and falsely consignifies that there are two distinct things (Marcus and Tullius) when in fact there is one thing. The point here is not just that Holcot rejects any distinction between the essence and the personal properties (the relations), but that methodologically his argument is almost identical to that of Ockham. His point is that the use of a plural verb to speak about essentia and relatio is problematic because when read de virtute sermonis (proprie, in Ockham's terms) the word sunt indicates two distinct things, when in fact there is a strict identity between essentia and relatio.
Methodologically, therefore, Holcot agrees with Ockham that much confusion arises when Trinitarian propositions are not formulated precisely. Thus, while it seems appropriate to say ‘the Father has paternity’ or ‘the divine essence and paternity are identical’—such statements are in fact problematic. The problem is that such propositions taken proprie or de virtute sermonis signify some kind of distinction or plurality that is inappropriate to the divine nature.
To help clarify the position of Ockham and Holcot, it is perhaps useful to consider the following propositions; after all, the reader may rightfully wonder what the difference is between the use of the plural verb in:
The Father and paternity are identical,
The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are wise.
Ockham and Holcot would both agree that the plural verb (are) in the first sentence is problematic while the identical verb in the second sentence is not. The reason is that in the first sentence the verb indicates a plurality or distinction between the Father and paternity when in fact there is no kind of distinction between the Father and paternity. The Father is paternity. However, in the second proposition the plural verb is used to indicate the distinctions between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In this instance, since there is some kind of minimal distinction between the three divine persons, along with essential identity, the plural verb can be accepted.
Holcot does not restrict his linguistic rules to plural verbs and it is useful to consider one further example as related to the divine essence and the personal properties. He writes that the following proposition should not be concededFootnote 43:
Here it is initially difficult to see what Holcot would object to. He clearly thinks that there is a strict identity between the essence and the relation and the phrase seems harmless enough. The problem, though, is that when one states that between the essence and relation there is some kind of identity, it seems to imply that there is some kind of distinction between the essence and relation. As Holcot objects, there is nothing ‘between something and itself (inter aliquid et seipsum)’. In this case, the term inter is objected to on the grounds that it signifies some kind of distinction where in fact there is strict unity.
The Constitution of the Divine Persons
The constitution of the divine persons is a topic that was hotly debated in the second half of the thirteenth century. Henry of Ghent and John Duns Scotus, for example, argued that a divine person was in fact a ‘constitution’ of the essence and a unique personal property; further, both Henry and Scotus would provide complex metaphysical accounts to explain precisely how the essence and property combine to ‘constitute’ a divine person.Footnote 44 Holcot, following Ockham in the Summa, rejected any language that speaks about the constitution of a divine person.
Holcot's methodological approach to Trinitarian questions is similar to Ockham's in the Summa logicae. Holcot observes that earlier thinkers—he notes Henry of Ghent, Thomas Aquinas, John Duns Scotus, et alii —spoke improperly when they discussed the constitution of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Such authors often spoke as if ‘something constitutes the Father, in the being of the Father (aliquid constituit Patrem in esse Patris)’.Footnote 45 However, as Ockham had argued, in propositions that contain verbs such as constituo there is an ambiguity, given that such sentences indicate a distinction within God that is not proper to God per se. The Father, Holcot argues, is not constituted in esse Patris, and to speak in such a way is to speak improperly given that the Father is not, strictly speaking, constituted in any way (that is, there is no constitution in the Father).Footnote 46
Holcot, like Ockham, notes that the example given above is not an isolated case. He states that such ways of speaking should not be extended (extendendus) but, instead, explained carefully (exponendus). In fact, there are numerous types of Trinitarian propositions that include similar problems. The proposition paternitas constituit Patrem in esse Patris (fatherhood constitutes the Father in the being of the Father) is almost identical to the example Ockham provides in the Summa logicae discussed above: paternitas est constitutiva Patris (fatherhood is constitutive of the Father).Footnote 47 And, following Ockham, Holcot will reject such propositions.
What is interesting about Holcot's account of constitution— if, indeed, we can call it an account of constitution— is that he is so close methodologically to Ockham's position in the Summa logicae. Ockham was concerned, throughout, with the way in which previous theologians had spoken improperly about constitution, the persons and their respective personal properties, or the essence and the personal properties.Footnote 48 Further, Ockham linked his argument in the Summa with the previous position of Augustine and an earlier tradition of medieval theology.Footnote 49 Holcot, of course, expands on Ockham in one important way; while Ockham did not name names, Holcot does, indicting specifically Henry, Thomas, Scotus, et alii.Footnote 50 Both Ockham and Holcot, therefore, can be read as rejecting much of the thirteenth-century developments in Trinitarian theology, in favor of an earlier, patristic tradition, that did not posit such distinctions.
Here we can note that Holcot's thought is parallel to Ockham's in two respects. Methodologically the argument of Holcot is similar to that of Ockham in that he is focused on the precise way of speaking. The focus is always on the use of language within a given theological proposition, and how that language can obscure the reality. Further, Holcot's Trinitarian theology is consistent with that of Ockham in the Summa logicae. Holcot is clear that the persons and personal properties in God are distinguished neither really, modally, formally, rationally, convertibly (realiter, modaliter, formaliter, ratione, convertibiliter), nor in any other way.Footnote 51 The persons are distinct in and of themselves.
III. Conclusion
Robert Holcot's Trinitarian theology is an interesting testcase for rethinking some of the historiographical models employed in the field of medieval intellectual history. Afterall, is the Dominican, Robert Holcot, a ‘truly Dominican’ theologian? Here we return to the two-model narrative of Théodore de Régnon, as well as the argument of Philotheus Boehner. We begin with the latter.
The Franciscan, Philotheus Boehner, was a student of William of Ockham and sought to defend Ockham not only from his modern critics, but also from the ‘taint by association’ that hovered over the much-maligned Centiloquium.Footnote 52 In his fervor to defend Ockham by means of linking the Centiloquium with Holcot, and not the Venerable Inceptor, however, it seems that Boehner failed to grasp just how close Ockham and Holcot were methodologically and historically. More important, for our purposes, is the fact that Boehner was insistent in ascribing to Holcot quite ‘radical views’—from his perspective—regarding the non-universality of Aristotelian logic and the denial of the formal distinction. The problem with such an approach is that it attempts to drive a wedge between Ockham and Holcot, when, as was argued above, the two authors shared quite a bit in common. Here one suspects, as well, that there is an attempt to group together Scotus and Ockham as fellow Franciscans who shared a common tradition, from the more ‘radical’ views of the Dominican Robert Holcot. We will return to this argument below, but first we return to Théodore de Régnon
The two-models approach to medieval Trinitarian theology that one finds in de Régnon is an interesting case of a historiographical narrative that has the potential to obscure more than it enlightens. That said, one has to concede at the outset that for a given period of time — e.g., from about 1270–1320— the two-model approach to medieval Trinitarian theology is informative and instructive. As Russell Friedman has demonstrated, there were heated debates between the Franciscans and Dominicans regarding disparate relations and opposed relations respectively;Footnote 53 further, in certain periods it is clear that there was a particular party line that members of the Orders were expected to follow, at some level. That said, the model often obscures other facts, in several important ways: first, the two-model narrative cannot be extended chronologically beyond certain dates, because the historical data does not support adopting this approach in either the long twelfth century (or earlier) or in the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries; second, the defender of the two-model approach must always concede that between c.1270 and c.1320 there were other models that remained operative, and, further, that certain individual Franciscans and Dominicans did not ‘toe the party line’. In fact, in the present paper we have a Franciscan and a Dominican developing Trinitarian theologies that are neither ‘Franciscan’ nor ‘Dominican’ per the two-model narrative, but are in fact a much maligned (per the narrative) tertium quid. The point, therefore, is that the two-model approach has some explanatory value, but as I argue elsewhere—following Ockham's typology above—there are at least four models of late medieval Trinitarian theology that are operative in the fourteenth century.Footnote 54 But, to return to the main question, how does this impact how one reads the Dominican Robert Holcot?
Robert Holcot was a member of the Order of Preachers, who, ironically, often does not ‘fit’ modern historiographical narratives, such as the two-model theory.Footnote 55 One could go down the list of accepted positions within historiographical narratives delineating ‘Dominican theology’ and Holcot would continually fall outside of what is often understood as normative: e.g., his views on the nature of theology as a science, the proofs for the existence of God, the relationship between faith and reason, the universality of Aristotelian logic, and, of course, Trinitarian theology. Holcot, as we saw above, is clearly not ‘Dominican’ with respect to his understanding of the Trinity, and one could probably extend that broader to include his understanding of how God is known (theological epistemology) and revealed. Ironically, however, Holcot was a theologian who had profound pastoral sensibilities, and was entirely committed to the original vocation of Dominic and Diego, as evidenced through his sermons, preaching aids, and biblical commentaries.Footnote 56 Holcot was a true preacher within an order of preachers — a true Dominican.
What this demonstrates, I think, is that as historians of medieval thought, and the theology of religious orders in particular, we have to exercise extreme caution when implementing historiographical narratives that pit one Order against another. It is often helpful to consider a given thinker's position over and against a contrasting positions, and, as such, thinkers such as Thomas Aquinas are often set in relief with another, e.g., John Duns Scotus, to gain some much needed perspective. That said, such contrasting positions need to be considered with care, and when comparing two ‘traditions’ or ‘orders’ or ‘schools of thought’, the stakes are even higher.
Here, in a jubilee issue of a journal edited by Dominicans, it is imperative that the true breadth of the Order is valued and appreciated. And, as researchers who continue to explore the breadth and depth of the Dominican tradition, I think we must do so with an eye to the narratives we have inherited, continually asking whether or not those narratives are consistent with the facts. Robert Holcot, we have learned, is certainly a Dominican theologian, albeit one that took a page from the great Franciscan logician William of Ockham and developed a decidedly ‘non-Dominican’ (read ‘non-Thomistic’) and ‘non-Franciscan’ approach to questions of Trinitarian theology.