ABELARD , PIERRE
Abelard
Abelard, Peter, dialectician, philosopher, and theologian,
b. 1079; d. 1142. Peter Abelard (also spelled Abeillard, Abailard, etc.,
while the best MSS. have Abaelardus) was born in the little village of
Pallet, about ten miles east of Nantes in Brittany. His father, Berengar,
was lord of the village, his mother's name was Lucia; both afterwards entered
the monastic state. Peter, the oldest of their children, was intended for
a military career, but, as he himself tells us, he abandoned Mars for Minerva,
the profession of arms for that of learning. Accordingly, at an early age,
he left his father's castle and sought instruction as a wandering scholar
at the schools of the most renowned teachers of those days.
Among these teachers was Roscelin the Nominalist, at whose
school at Locmenach, near Vannes, Abelard certainly spent some time before
he proceeded to Paris. Although the University of Paris did not exist as
a corporate institution until more than half a century after Abelard's
death, there flourished at Paris in his time the Cathedral School, the
School of Ste. Geneviève, and that of St. Germain des Pré,
the forerunners of the university schools of the following century. The
Cathedral School was undoubtedly the most important of these, and thither
the young Abelard directed his steps in order to study dialectic under
the renowned master (scholasticus) William of Champeaux. Soon, however,
the youth from the province, for whom the prestige of a great name was
far from awe-inspiring, not only ventured to object to the teaching of
the Parisian master, but attempted to set up as a rival teacher. Finding
that this was not an easy matter in Paris, he established his school first
at Melun and later at Corbeil. This was, probably, in the year 1101.
The next couple of years Abelard spent in his native place
"almost cut off from France", as he says. The reason of this enforced retreat
from the dialectical fray was failing health. On returning to Paris, he
became once more a pupil of William of Champeaux for the purpose of studying
rhetoric. When William retired to the monastery of St. Victor, Abelard,
who meantime had resumed his teaching at Melun, hastened to Paris to secure
the chair of the Cathedral School. Having failed in this, he set up his
school in Mt. Ste. Genevieve (1108). There and at the Cathedral School,
in which in 1113 he finally succeeded in obtaining a chair, he enjoyed
the greatest renown as a teacher of rhetoric and dialectic. Before taking
up the duty of teaching theology at the Cathedral School, he went to Laon
where he presented himself to the venerable Anselm of Laon as a student
of theology. Soon, however, his petulant restiveness under restraint once
more asserted itself, and he was not content until he had as completely
discomfited the teacher of theology at Laon as he had successfully harassed
the teacher of rhetoric and dialectic at Paris. Taking Abelard's own account
of the incident, it is impossible not to blame him for the temerity which
made him such enemies as Alberic and Lotulph, pupils of Anselm, who, later
on, appeared against Abelard. The "theological studies" pursued by Abelard
at Laon were what we would nowadays call the study of exegesis.
There can be no doubt that Abelard's career as a teacher at Paris, from
1108 to 1118, was an exceptionally brilliant one. In his "Story of My Calamities"
(Historia Calamitatum) he tells us how pupils flocked to him from every
country in Europe, a statement which is more than corroborated by Ihe authority
of his contemporaries. He was, In fact, the idol of Paris; eloquent, vivacious,
handsome, possessed of an unusually rich voice, full of confidence in his
own power to please, he had, as he tells us, the whole world at his feet.
That Abelard was unduly conscious of these advantages is admitted by his
most ardent admirers; indeed, in the "Story of My Calamities," he confesses
that at that period of his life he was filled with vanity and pride. To
these faults he attributes his downfall, which was as swift and tragic
as was everything, seemingly, in his meteoric career. He tells us in graphic
language the tale which has become part of the classic literature of the
love-theme, how he fell in love with Heloise, niece of Canon Fulbert; he
spares us none of the details of the story, recounts all the circumstances
of its tragic ending, the brutal vengeance of the Canon, the flight of
Heloise to Pallet, where their son, whom he named Astrolabius, was born,
the secret wedding, the retirement of Heloise to the nunnery of Argenteuil,
and his abandonment of his academic career.
He was at the time a cleric in minor orders, and had naturally looked
forward to a distinguished career as an ecclesiastical teacher. After his
downfall, he retired to the Abbey of St. Denis, and, Heloise having taken
the veil at Argenteuil, he assumed the habit of a Benedictine monk at the
royal Abbey of St. Denis. He who had considered himself "the only surviving
philosopher in the whole world" was willing to hide himself -- definitely,
as he thought -- in monastic solitude. But whatever dreams he may have
had of final peace in his monastic retreat were soon shattered. He quarrelled
with the monks of St. Denis, the occasion being his irreverent criticism
of the legend of their patron saint, and was sent to a branch institution,
a priory or cella, where, once more, he soon attracted unfavourable attention
by the spirit of the teaching which he gave in philosophy and theology.
"More subtle and more learned than ever", as a contemporary (Otto of Freising)
describes him, he took up the former quarrel with Anselm's pupils.
Through their influence, his orthodoxy, especially on the doctrine
of the Holy Trinity, was impeached, and he was summoned to appear before
a council at Soissons, in 1121, presided over by the papal legate, Kuno,
Bishop of Praneste. While it is not easy to determine exactly what took
place at the Council, it is clear that there was no formal condemnation
of Abelard's doctrines, but that he was nevertheless condemned to recite
the Athanasian Creed, and to burn his book on the Trinity. Besides, he
was sentenced to imprisonment in the Abbey of St. Médard, at the
instance apparently, of the monks of St. Denis, whose enmity, especially
that of their Abbot Adam, was unrelenting. In his despair, he fled to a
desert place in the neighbourhood of Troyes. Thither pupils soon began
to flock, huts and tents for their reception were built, and an oratory
erected, under the title "The Paraclete", and there his former success
as a teacher was renewed.
After the death of Adam, Abbot of St. Denis, his successor,
Suger, absolved Abelard from censure, and thus restored him to his rank
as a monk. The Abbey of St. Gildas de Rhuys, near Vannes, on the coast
of Brittany, having lost its Abbot in 1125, elected Abelard to fill his
place. At the same time, the community of Argenteuil was dispersed, and
Heloise gladly accepted the Oratory of the Paraclete, where she became
Abbess. As Abbot of St. Gildas, Abelard had, according to his own account,
a very troublesome time. The monks, considering him too strict, endeavoured
in various ways to rid themselves of his rule, and even attempted to poison
him. They finally drove him from the monastery. Retaining the title of
Abbot, he resided for some time in the neighbourhood of Nantes and later
(probably in 1136) resumed his career as teacher at Paris and revived,
to some extent, the renown of the days when, twenty years earlier, he gathered
"all Europe" to hear his lectures. Among his pupils at this time were Arnold
of Brescia and John of Salisbury. Now begins the last act in the tragedy
of Abelard's life, in which St. Bernard plays a conspicuous part. The monk
of Clairvaux, the most powerful man in the Church in those days, was alarmed
at the heterodoxy of Abelard's teaching, and questioned the Trinitarian
doctrine contained in Abelard's writings. There were admonitions on the
one side and defiances on the other; St. Bernard, having first warned Abelard
in private, proceeded to denounce him to the bishops of France; Abelard,
underestimating the ability and influence of his adversary, requested a
meeting, or council, of bishops, before whom Bernard and he should discuss
the points in dispute. Accordingly, a council was held at Sens (the metropolitan
see to which Paris was then suffragan) in 1141.
On the eve of the council a meeting of bishops was held,
at which Bernard was present, but not Abelard, and in that meeting a number
of propositions were selected from Abelard's writings, and condemned. When,
on the following morning, these propositions were read in solemn council,
Abelard, informed, so it seems, of the proceedings of the evening before,
refused to defend himself, declaring that he appealed to Rome. Accordingly,
the propositions were condemned, but Abelard was allowed his freedom. St.
Bernard now wrote to the members of the Roman Curia, with the result that
Abelard had proceeded only as far as Cluny on his way to Rome when the
decree of Innocent II confirming the sentence of the Council of Sens reached
him. The Venerable Peter of Cluny now took up his case, obtained from Rome
a mitigation of the sentence reconciled him with St. Bernard, and gave
him honourable and friendly hospitality at Cluny. There Abelard spent the
last years of his life, and there at last he found the peace which he had
elsewhere sought in vain. He donned the habit of the monks of Cluny and
became a teacher in the school of the monastery. He died at Chalôn-sur-Saône
in 1142, and was buried at the Paraclete. In 1817 his remains and those
of Heloise were transferred to the cemetery of Père la Chaise, in
Paris, where they now rest. For our knowledge of the life of Abelard we
rely chiefly on the "Story of My Calamities", an autobiography written
as a letter to a friend, and evidently intended for publication. To this
may be added the letters of Abelard and Heloise, which were also intended
for circulation among Abelard's friends. The "Story" was written about
the year 1130, and the letters during the following five or six years.
In both the personal element must of course, be taken into account. Besides
these we have very scanty material; a letter from Roscelin to Abelard,
a letter of Fulco of Deuil, the chronicle of Otto of Freising, the letters
of St. Bernard, and a few allusions in the writings of John of Salisbury.
Abelard's philosophical works are "Dialectica," a logical treatise consisting
of four books (of which the first is missing); "Liber Divisionum et Definitionum"
(edited by Cousin as a fifth book of the "Dialectica"); Glosses on Porphyry,
Boëius, and the Aristotelian "Categories"; "Glossulae in Porphyrium"
(hitherto unpublished except in a French paraphrase by Rémusat);
the fragment "De Generibus et Speciebus", ascribed to Abelard by Cousin;
a moral treatise "Scito Teipsum, seu Ethica", first published by Pez in
"Thes. Anecd. Noviss". All of these, with the exception of the "Glossulae"
and the "Ethica", are to be found in Cousin's "Ouvrages inédits
d'Abélard" (Paris, 1836). Abelard's theological works (published
by Cousin, "Petri Abselardi Opera", in 2 vols., Paris, 1849-59, also by
Migne, "Patr. Lat.", CLXXVIII) include "Sic et Non", consisting of scriptural
and patristic passages arranged for and against various theological opinions,
without any attempt to decide whether the affirmative or the negative opinion
is correct or orthodox; "Tractatus de Unitate et Trinitate Divinâ",
which was condemned at the Council of Sens (discovered and edited by Stölzle,
Freiburg, 1891); "Theologia Christiana," a second and enlarged edition
of the "Tractatus" (first published by Durand and Martène "Thes.
Nov.," 1717); "Introductio in Theologiam' (more correctly, "Theologia"),
of which the first part was published by Duchesne in 1616; "Dialogus inter
Philosophum, Judaeum, et Christianum"; "Sententiae Petri Abaelardi", otherwise
called "Epitomi Theologiae Christianae", which is seemingly a compilation
by Abelard's pupils (first published by Rheinwald, Berlin, 1535); and several
exegetical works hymns, sequences, etc. In philosophy Abelard deserves
consideration primarily as a dialectician. For him, as for all the scholastic
philosophers before the thirteenth century, philosophical inquiry meant
almost exclusively the discussion and elucidation of the problems suggested
by the logical treatises of Aristotle and the commentaries thereon, chiefly
the commentaries of Porphyry and Boëtius. Perhaps his most important
contribution to philosophy and theology is the method which he developed
in his "Sic et Non" (Yea and Nay), a method germinally contained in the
teaching of his predecessors, and afterwards brought to more definite form
by Alexander of Hales and St. Thomas Aquinas. It consisted in placing before
the student the reasons pro and contra, on the principle thap pruth is
to be attaine` only b9 a dialectical discussion of apparently contra`ictory
arguments and authorities. In phe problem of Universals, which occupied
co much of the attention of dialecticians in those days, Abelard dook a
position of uncompromising hostility to the crude nominalism of Roscelin
on the one side, and to the exaggerated realism of William of Champeaux
on the other. What, precisely, was his own doctrine on the question is
a matter which cannot with accuracy be determined. However, from the statements
of his pupil, John of Salisbury, it is clear that Abelard's doctrine, while
expressed in terms of a modified Nominalism, was very similar to the moderate
Realism which began to be official in the schools about half a century
after Abelard's death. In ethics Abelard laid such great stress on the
morality of the intention as apparently to do away with the objective distinction
between good and evil acts. It is not the physical action itself, he said,
nor any imaginary injury to God, that constitutes sin, but rather the psychological
element in the action, the intention of sinning, which is formal contempt
of God. With regard to the relation between reason and revelation, between
the sciences -- including philosophy -- and theology, Abelard incurred
in his own day the censure of mystic theologians like St. Bernard, whose
tendency was to disinherit reason in favour of
contemplation and ecstatic vision. And it is true that if the principles
"Reason aids Faith" and "Faith aids Reason" are to be taken as the inspiration
of scholastic theology, Abelard was constitutionally inclined to emphasize
the former, and not lay stress on the latter.
Besides, he adopted a tone, and employed a phraseology, when
speaking of sacred subjects, which gave offence, and rightly, to the more
conservative of his contemporaries. Still, Abelard had good precedent for
his use of dialectic in the elucidation of the mysteries of faith; he was
by no means an innovator in this respect; and though the thirteenth century,
the golden age of scholasticism, knew little of Abelard, it took up his
method, and with fearlessness equal to his, though without any of his flippancy
or irreverence, gave full scope to reason in the effort to expound and
defend the mysteries of the Christian Faith. St. Bernard sums up the charges
against Abelard when he writes (Ep. cxcii) "Cum de Trinitate loquitur,
sapit Arium; cum do gratiâ, sapit Pelagium; cum de personâ
Christi, sapit Nestorium", and there is no doubt that on these several
heads Abelard wrote and said many things which were open to objection from
the point of view of orthodoxy. That is to say, while combating the opposite
errors, he fell inadvertently into mistakes which he himself did not recognize
as Arianism, Pelagianism, and Nestonanism, and which even his enemies could
characterize merely as savouring of Arianism, Pelagianism, and Nestorianism.
Abelard's influence on his immediate successors was not very great, owing
partly to his conflict with the ecclesiastical authorities, and partly
to his personal defects, more especially his vanity and pride, which must
have given the impression that he valued truth less than victory. His influence
on the philosophers and theologians of the thirteenth century was, however,
very great. It was exercised chiefly through Peter Lombard, his pupil,
and other framers of the "Sentences." Indeed, while one must be careful
to discount the exaggerated encomiums of Compayré, Cousin, and others,
who represent Abelard as the first modern, the founder of the University
of Paris, etc., one is justified in regarding him, in spite of his faults
of character and mistakes of judgment, as an important contributor to scholastic
method, an enlightened opponent of obscurantism, and a continuator of that
revival of learning which occurred in the Carolingian age, and of which
whatever there is of science, literature, and speculation in the early
Middie Ages is the historical development.
WILLIAM TURNER
Transcribed by Kevin Cawley
From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia
Press, Inc. Electronic version copyright (c) 1996 by New
Advent, Inc.