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Hugh of St. Victor
Medieval philosopher, theologian, and mystical writer; b. 1096, at the manor of Hartingham in Saxony; d. 11 March, 1141. The works of Derling and of Hugonin leave no doubt that Mabillon was mistaken in declaring his birthplace to be Ypres in Flanders. He was the eldest son of Conrad, Count of Blankenburg. His uncle, Reinhard who had studied in Paris under William of Champeaux, had on his return to Saxony been made Bishop of Halberstadt. It was in the monastery of St. Pancras, at Hamerleve near Halberstadt, that Hugh received his education. In spite of the opposition of his parents, he took the habit of the Canons Regular of St. Augustine at Hamerleve; before his novitiate was completed, the disturbed state of the country led his uncle to advise him to go to the monastery of St. Victor in Paris, where he arrived about 1115. William of Champeaux, its founder, on his election to the See of Châlons, in 1112, had been succeeded by Gilduin, under whom it lost none of its reputation for piety and learning. Under his rule and guidance Hugh spent the rest of his life, studying, teaching, and writing. On the tragic death of Thomas (20 Aug., 1133) Hugh was chosen to succeed him as head of the School of St. Victor, and under his direction it attained to brilliant success. He is sometimes spoken of as alter Augustinus, because of his familiarity with the works of the great Father of the Church.
His own works cover the whole range of the arts and sacred science taught in
his day. Until a few years ago, however, most historians of philosophy put him
down as a narrow-minded mystic out of touch with the world of thought and study,
who hampered rather than helped scientific progress, and whose fantastic
symbolism misled subsequent generations. A careful examination of his works has
led to a truer appreciation of one whom Harnack (History of Dogma, tr. London,
1899, VI, 44) terms the most influential theologian of the twelfth century
. A
great mystical writer, he was also a philosopher and a scholastic theologian of
the first order. Primarily, he was a great lecturer, and that fact accounts for
the early dispersal of his works as his hearers dispersed, their frequent
incorporation in later treatises, and the publication under his name of so many
unauthentic treatises. His teaching was one of the foundations of Scholastic
theology, and his influence has affected the whole development of Scholasticism,
for he was the first who after synthesizing the dogmatic treasures of the
patristic age systematized them and formed them into a coherent and complete
body of doctrine. That was the work of a genius. But his great merit as head of
the school of St. Victor is that, when the heterodoxy and doctrinal temerity of
Abelard endangered the new method which was being applied to the study of
theology, Hugh and his followers, by their prudent moderation and unimpeachable
orthodoxy, reassured alarmed believers and acclimatized the new scientific
method in the Catholic schools.
The work of theological classification made great progress in the time of
Abelard, and in the Summæ
were condensed encyclopedic summaries of the whole
of theology. Abelard's Sic et Non
traced the lines upon which the Summæ
were
built up; but they reproduced the drawbacks of the parent work in that the
difficulties stated in the pros and cons were frequently left unsolved. The
introduction of more strictly logical processes culminated in the fusion of
patristic erudition and rational speculation in the new constructive dialectical
method. After the dogma had been established by the interpretation of the
Scriptures and the Fathers, the assistance of philosophy was sought to show the
rational character of the dogma. That application of dialectics to theology led
Abelard into heresy and theologians of the twelfth century were deeply divided
as to its legitimacy. It was defended by the Abelardian and Victorian Schools,
and from them is descended what is properly known as Scholastic theology. The
Abelardian School of theology continued to exist even after its founder's
condemnation in 1141, but was influenced by the Victorian School, which in turn
felt the influence of the Abelardian School, but kept well within the limits of
orthodoxy. Thus both contributed to the triumph of Scholasticism.
Any attempted synthesis of Hugh's teaching should be preceded by a critical examination of the authenticity of the treatises which have been included in the collected edition of his works, and some of the most authoritative historians of philosophy and theology have gone astray through non-observance of this elementary precaution. Others again have concentrated their attention on his writings on mystical theology, where the supernatural reigns supreme to attempt to appreciate an author's philosophical teaching upon data furnished by his endeavours to explain what passes in the soul possessed of perfect charity can only lead to confusion. Hugh has left us sufficient material, philosophical and theological, in which rational explanations stand side by side with revealed teaching, to enable us to form a sound opinion of his position as a philosopher, a theologian, and a mystic.
As a Philosopher, he has a clear idea, frequently emphasized, of the
subject-matter of a purely rational science, different from theology; and the
two orders of knowledge are as clearly differentiated in his writings as in
those of St. Thomas. By philosophy he meant the whole range of knowledge
attained by natural reason. The assigning of a definite place to philosophy in
the plan of studies was the result of a long and gradual process; but its place
above the liberal arts and below theology is clearly defined by Hugh in the
Eruditionis Didascaliæ
. Abandoning the old outgrown framework, Hugh sets forth
a new division of knowledge: Philosophia dividitur in theoreticam, practicam,
mechanicam et logicam. Haec quatuor omnem continent scientiam.
Philosophy is
divided into theoretical, practical, mechanical, and logical. These four
[divisions] comprise all knowledge.
(Erud. Didasc., II, 2). This new division
of knowledge into speculative science, concerned with the nature and laws of
things, ethics, the products of man's activity, thoughts and words, is well and
logically thought out. The whole of his exposition of what is meant by knowledge,
its object, divisions, and the order in which they ought to be dealt with, is a
study unique in the Middle Ages before the second half of the twelfth century,
and had Hugh never written more than the early books of the Didascaliæ
, he
would still deserve a place among the philosophers of Scholasticism. It is
interesting to note that, although the question of universals in his day filled
the schools, and at St. Victor's William of Champeaux had many faithful
followers, Hugh systematically avoids the whole question, although in places he
rejects some of the principal arguments put forward by the Realists. The
markedly psychological trend of the whole of his philosophical system has
recently been the subject of careful study by Ostler. Hugh's teaching concerning
God has been fully analysed by Kilgenstein, and gives us the key to the whole of
his teaching: by the use of reason man can and must arrive at the knowledge of
God: aseitas, pure-spirituality, absolute simplicity, eternity, immensity,
immutability of being and of action¯such are the conceptions he discovers in his
Maker, and which furnish him with a synthetic and well-reasoned idea of the
Divine essence. At the same time he maintains the moral necessity of revelation,
so that the teaching of St. Thomas, as set forth in the early chapters of the
Contra Gentiles
, adds nothing to Hugh. It is interesting to note that,
following St. Anselm's Monologium
, he takes the human soul as the first
element of observation as to the contingence of nature, and thence rises to God.
(See P. L., CLXXVI, 824.)
As a Theologian. His valuable work as a sound thinker has already been
mentioned; he had a keen appreciation of the merits of much of Abelard's
theological work and always cites him with respect; at the same time he combated
his errors. Thus, when Abelard, in treating of creation, had replaced the
freedom and omnipotence of God by a most exaggerated Optimism, Hugh attacked the
error in his De Sacr.
, Bk. I, P. II, c. xxii. His Christological teaching is
marked by a semi-Apollinarist error in attributing to the humanity of Christ not
only the uncreated knowledge of the Word, but omnipotence and other Divine
attributes. But he vigorously combats Abelard's erroneous conceptions of the
hypostatic union which led to a revival of Adoptionism that troubled the schools
until its condemnation 18 Feb., 1177, by Alexander III (1164-77). Hugh's
sacramental teaching is of great importance in that he begins the final stage in
the formulation of the definition of a sacrament; synthesizing the scattered
teaching of St. Augustine, he set aside the Isidorian definition and gave a
truer and more comprehensive one, which, when perfected by the author of the
Summa Sententiarum
, was adopted in the schools. His works contain an extensive
body of moral doctrine based upon a solid patristic basis, in the grouping of
which the influence of Abelard is visible; but in his accurate analysis of the
nature of sin, he combats Abelard's error as to the indifferent character of all
acts in themselves apart from the will of the doer. At the same time he held an
erroneous view as to the reviviscence, after a fall, of previously pardoned
mortal sins (De Sacr., Bk. II, P. XIV, c. viii).
As a Mystic. Historians of philosophy are now coming to see that it
betrays a lack of psychological imagination to be unable to figure the
subjective coexistence of Aristotelian dialectics with mysticism of the
Victorine or Bernardine type and even their compenetration. Speculative thought
was not, and could not be, isolated from religious life lived with such
intensity as it was in the Middle Ages, when that speculative thought was active
everywhere, in every profession, in every degree of the social scale. After all,
did not the same mind give us the two Summæ
and the Office of the Blessed
Sacrament? Hugh of St. Victor was the leader of the great mystical movement of
which the School of St. Victor became the centre, and he formulated, as it were,
a code of the laws governing the soul's progress to union with God. The gist of
his teaching is that mere knowledge is not an end in itself, it ought to be but
the stepping-stone to the mystical life¯through thought, meditation, and
contemplation; thought seeks God in the material world, meditation discovers Him
within ourselves, contemplation knows His supernaturally and intuitively. Such
are the three eyes
of the rational soul. Hugh's mystical teaching was
amplified by Richard of St. Victor, whose proud disdain for philosophy has been
wrongly attributed to Hugh.
Hugh's chief works are:
(1) De Sacramentis Christianæ Fidei
(c. 1134), his masterpiece and most
extensive work, a dogmatic synthesis similar to, but more perfect than the
Introductio ad Theologiam
of Abelard (c. 1118), which was only concerned with
the knowledge of God and of the Trinity. It is of a more literary character: in
it the first place belongs to the argument from authority, but the utilization
of the dialectical method binds the discussion together. It is at once a summary
and a corrected version of his earlier works. The work is divided into two books
comprising twelve and eighteen parts respectively each containing numerous
chapters. The following analysis of its contents will convey some idea of its
range: Book I: 1. The Creation; 2. The end of man's creation; 3. The knowledge
of the Triune God; 4. The will of God and its signs; 5. Angels; 6 Man before the
Fall; 7. The Fall and its consequences; 8. The restoration of man and the use of
sacraments; 9. The sacraments in general; 10. Faith; 11. The sacraments in
particular and primarily those of the natural law; 12. Sacraments of the written
law. Book II: 1. Incarnation of the Word; 2. Grace and the Church; 3. The orders
of the ecclesiastical hierarchy; 4. A mystical explanation of the sacred
vestments; 5. Dedication of churches (in which the sacraments are conferred); 6.
Baptism; 7. Confirmation; 8. Holy Eucharist; 9. The lesser sacraments
(sacramentals); 10. Simony; 11. Matrimony; 12. Vows; 13. Virtues and vices; 14.
Confession and absolution; 15. Extreme unction; 16. The state of souls after
death; 17. Christ's second coming and the resurrection of the dead; 18. The
state of things to come. It is the first complete theological work of the
schools.
(2) Eruditionis Didascaliæ, libri septem
comprises what we should now speak
of as encyclopedics, methodology, introduction to Sacred Scripture, and an
indication of how we may rise from things visible to a knowledge of the Trinity.
(3) Scriptural commentaries (important both for his theological and mystical
doctrines): Adnotationes Elucidatoriæ in Pentateuchon
; In librum Judicum
;
In libros Regum
(notes on the literal meaning of the texts); In Salomonis
Ecclesiasten Homiliæ xix
(practical rather than exegetical); Adnotationes
Elucidatoriæ in Threnos Jeremiæ; in Joelem prophetam
(working out the literal,
allegorical, and moral meanings); Explanatio in Canticum Beatæ Mariæ
(allegorical and tropological). The Quæstiones et Decisiones in Epistolas S.
Pauli
, printed among his works in Migne, are certainly posterior to Hugh.
(4) Commentariorum in Hierarchiam Clestem S. Dionysii Aeropagitæ secundum
interpretationem Joannis Scoti libri x.
(5) His chief mystical works are: De Arcâ Noe Morali et Mysticâ
De
Vanitate Mundi
; De Arrhâ Animæ
; De Contemplatione et eius speciebus
(first
published by Hauréau as an appendix to his book in 1859).
(6) As regards the Summa Sententiarum
, usually ascribed to Hugh of St.
Victor, considerable discussion has recently taken place. Hauréau, Mignon, Gietl,
Kilgenstein, Baltus, Ostler attribute it to Hugh. Denifle, arguing from the
anonymity of the MSS., left the question open. But Portalié, basing his argument
upon important doctrinal differences, appears to have shown that it is not the
work of Hugh, although it belongs to his school. The general line of his
argument is that the Summa Sententiarum
is certainly posterior to the De
Sacramentis
, upon which it frequently draws; doctrines, methods, and formulæ
show evident progress in the Summa
. It would seem that it is absolutely
impossible that Hugh should have written the Summa
after the De Sacramentis
,
for the Summa
borrows from the Abelardian School errors Hugh would not have
taught, and even errors and formulæ which he expressly attacked. De Wulf agrees
with this, and Pourrat has brought additional evidence, based upon an
examination of the sacramental teaching of the two works, in support of the same
thesis. None of the writers cited above, as being in favour of Hugh's authorship,
have dealt with Portalié's evidence.
The best edition of the works of Hugh of St. Victor is that of the Canons of
St. Victor, printed at Rouen in 1648. It is not a critical edition, however, and
genuine, spurious, and doubtful works are found side by side. It was republished
in 1854, with slight modifications, by the Abbé Migne in P. L., CLXXV-CLXXVII,
but it is neither complete nor critically satisfactory, and should be used in
conjunction with J.-B. Hauréau's: Hugues de St-Victor et l'edition de ses
uvres
(Paris, 1859) and the same writer's Les uvres de Hugues de
Saint-Victor: Essai Critique
(Paris, 1886), in which he supplements and
corrects many of the conclusions of the earlier work. But Hauréau's
rationalistic bias renders his exposition of Hugh's doctrine unreliable, without
careful checking.
DERLING, Dissertatio de Hugone a S. Victore (Helmstadt, 1745); LIEBNER, Hugo von S. Victor und die theolog. Richtungen s. Zeit (Leipzig, 1832); WEIS, Hugonis de S. Victore Methodus Mysticus (Strasbgurg, 1839); HUGONIN, Essai sur la fondation de l'Ecole de Saint-Victor in P. L., CLXXV; HAURÉAU, Hugues de Saint-Victor: Nouvel Examen de l'edition de ses uvres (Paris, 1886); HETWER, De Fides et Scientiæ discrimine ac consortio juxta mentem Hugonis a S. Victore, Commentarius (Breslau, 1875); DENIFLE, Archiv für Literatur und Kirchengeschichte des Mittelalters, I (1885), 402, 584; III (1887), 634-40; GIFTL, Die Sentenzen Rolands (Freiburg im Br., 1891); MIGNON, Les origines de la Scholastique et Hugues de Saint-Victor (Paris, 1895); SCHMIDT, Hugo von St. Victor als Pädagog (Meissen, 1893); KILGENSTEIN, Die Gotteslehre des Hugo von St. Victor (Würzburg, 1897); Summarized by BALTUS, Dieu d'après Hugues de St-Victor in Rev. Bénédictine, XV (1898), 109-123; 200-214; SANTINI, Ugo da S. Vittore: Studio Filosofico (Alatri, 1898); PORTALIÉ in Dict. de théol. cath., s. v. Abélard, I (Paris, 1903), 36 sq. (i. Fasc was published in 1899); DE WULF, Histoire de la philosophie médiévale (Louvain, 1905), 212-15; 228-30; OSTLER, Die Psychologie des Hugo von St. Viktor (1906); POURRAT,La théologie sacramentaire (Paris, 1907); BOUUAERT, Rev. d'Hist. Eccl., X (1909), 278 sq.
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