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Being, aevum, and nothingness: Edith Stein on death and dying
Authors:Antonio Calcagno
Affiliation:(1) King’s College, University of Western Ontario, 266 Epworth Avenue, London, Canada, N6A 2M3
Abstract:This article seeks to present for the first time a more systematic account of Edith Stein’s views on death and dying. First, I will argue that death does not necessarily lead us to an understanding of our earthly existence as aevum, that is, an experience of time between eternity and finite temporality. We always bear the mark of our finitude, including our finite temporality, even when we exist within the eternal mind of God. To claim otherwise, is to make identical our eternity with God’s eternity, thereby undermining the traditional Scholastic argument, which Stein holds, that there is no real relation between the being (and, therefore, (a)temporality) of God and the being of human persons. Second, I will argue that Stein excludes the category of potentiality from her discussion of death as a relation between the fullness or actuality of being and nothingness. In fact, death is more a relation between possibility/potentiality and nothingness than a relation between actual fullness and nothingness. What Stein describes as fullness ought to be read as potential.
Contact Information Antonio CalcagnoEmail:
Keywords:Death  Aevum  Potency  Temporality  Nothingness  Being
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