Dr. Steven Baldner

 
Department of Philosophy
St. Francis Xavier University
Antigonish, NS
B2G 2W5
sbaldner@stfx.ca
 
 


Courses:

Philosophy 100

Introduction to Philosophy

 

Philosophy 240

Philosophy of Religion

 

Philosophy 330/331/332

Ethics

 

Philosophy 361

Early Mediaeval Philosophy

 not taught in 2004-05

Philosophy 362

Philosophy of the High Middle Ages

 

Classics 110

Introductory Latin

 

Classics 230

Latin II

 not taught in 2004-05

Catholic Studies 320

Science and Christianity

see R. Kennedy, 2004-05

Academic Interests:

St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Albert the Great, Mediaeval Philosophy & Natural Philosophy

List of Publications:

"The Use of Scripture for the Refutation of Error, According to St. Thomas Aquinas," in Hamartia: The Concept of Error in the Western Tradition. Essays in Honor of John M. Crossett, ed. Donald V. Stump (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1983) 149-170.

"St. Bonaventure and the Temporal Beginning of the World," The New Scholasticism 63(1989) 206-228.

"St. Thomas Aquinas and Charles Hartshorne's Process Philosophy" Lyceum 1(1989) 1-18.

"St. Thomas Aquinas and Charles Hartshorne on Change and Process" in Philosophy and the God of Abraham: Essays in Memory of James A. Weisheipl, OP, ed. R. James Long (Toronto: PIMS, 1991) 17-29.

"The Soul in the Explanation of Life: Aristotle Against Reductionism" Lyceum 3(1991) 1-14.

"The Past Just Ain't What it Used to be: A Response to Kevin Staley and Ronald Tacelli, S.J." Lyceum 4(1992)1-4.

"Is St. Albert the Great a Dualist on Human Nature?" Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association (Annual Supplement to the American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly) 67 (1993) 219-229.

"St. Albert the Great on the Union of the Human Soul and Body," American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 70 (1996) 103-120.

"St. Bonaventure and the Demonstrability of a Temporal Beginning: A Reply to Richard Davis," American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 71 (1997) 225-236.

Thomas Aquinas on Creation: Writings on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (Book 2, Distinction 1, Question 1), with William E. Carroll. Translation of the text of Aquinas with historical and analytical introduction, notes, glossary, and bibliography. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 1997.

"St. Albert the Great and St. Thomas Aquinas on the Presence of Elements in a Compound," Sapientia 54 (1999) 41-57.

"Christian Philosophy, Etienne Gilson, and Fides et ratio" in Faith and reason: The Notre Dame Symposium edited by Timothy L. Smith. Notre Dame, IN: St. Augustine's Press, 2001.

"Sources of St. Thomas' Teaching on Prime Matter" in Aquinas' Sources, edited by Timothy L. Smith. Notre Dame, IN: St. Augustine's Press (forthcoming).

"Prime Matter: A Thomistic Reply to Some Recent Criticisms" in Reclaiming Nature: Essays in Thomistic Philosophy and Theology, ed. Michael M. Waddell, with introduction by Ralph McInerny. Notre Dame, IN: St. Augustine's Press, 2002.

Intellectual Development (in pictures):

1. Ca. 1955: Baldner definitively rejects a careet in big game hunting to devote himself to the study of philosophy.

2. 1968: Baldner reads Augustine's Confessions for the first time and is disturbed by the problem of evil.

3. 1969: Baldner meets Prof. William Carroll, who introduces Baldner to the history of ideas and dissuades him from accepting a football scholarship at the University of Michigan. With Carroll, Baldner says farewell to the U of M. football stadium.

4. 1972: Baldner reads Kierkegaard and becomes an existentialist.

5. 1974: Baldner studies Latin and the works of St. Anselm with Prof. John Crossett. Under Crossett's influence, Baldner accepts the arugment in the Proslogion as sound. Click here to see a picture of Prof Crossett in his study.

6. 1977: Baldner meets Father James A. Weisheipl, with whom he studies Aristotle's Physics and Posterior Analytics and Thomas' Commentaires thereon. Baldner becomes a card-carrying Thomist of the strict observance and learns the secret handshake.

Additional Links:

STFXPHIL  /  CATH