Read more
Spanish Jesuits such as Francisco Suárez (1548-1617), José de Acosta (1540-1600), Pedro de Ribadeneira (1526-1611) and Juan de Mariana (1536-1624) had a powerful impact on English thinkers of the magnitude of John Locke (1632-1704), Francis Bacon (1561-1626), Robert Persons (1546-1610), Algernon Sidney (1623-1683), and, later, William Robertson (1721-1793), Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859) and Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953). An influence that was sometimes hidden and always controversial.
This work highlights the importance of this influence regarding thought on politics, law and natural rights. A constitutionalist understanding of political power, the recognition and promotion of innate rights and the necessary subjection of rulers to the law, all form part of the important legacy of these scholastic doctors for European intellectual heritage.
Contributors to this volume: Rafael Alé Ruiz, Francisco T. Baciero Ruiz, Francisco Castilla Urbano, José Luis Cendejas Bueno, Alfonso Díaz Vera, Francisco Javier Gómez Díez, Cecilia Font de Villanueva, León M. Gómez Rivas, Fermín del Pino Díaz, Leopoldo J. Prieto López, Daniel Schwartz, Lorena Velasco Guerrero, and María Idoya Zorroza Huarte.
About the author
Leopoldo J. Prieto López, PhD (Philosophy, 1999, Ateneo Pontificio Regina Apostolorum in Rome, with university degrees in Law and Theology), is Professor of Philosophy at the Universidad Francisco de Vitoria. His main research interests are the history of modern philosophy and the history and philosophy of science.
José Luis Cendejas Bueno, PhD (Economics, 2001, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), is lecturer and researcher at the Universidad Francisco de Vitoria. He has published on the economic thought of Spanish Scholasticism and its influence on later European thought.