Richard of St. Victor's argument for the necessity of the Trinity : an exposition and analysis of the argument for a tri-personal God in 'De Trinitate'
Abstract
In his magnum opus, ‘De Trinitate’, the twelfth century canon Richard of St. Victor offers sustained
reflection on core dogmatic claims from the Athanasian creed. At the heart of the treatise is
Richard’s argument for exactly three divine persons. Starting with the necessity of a single,
maximally perfect divine substance, Richard reasons along four steps: (i) God must have maximal
charity, or other-love; (ii) to be perfectly good, delightful, and glorious, God’s other-love must be
shared among at least two, and (iii) among at least three, divine persons; (iv) the metaphysics of
divine processions and love each ensure the impossibility of four divine persons. Scripture and
trustworthy church authorities already give Richard certainty in these truths of faith. Even so, as
an act of ardent love Richard contemplates on the Trinity as seen in creation. From this epistemic
point of departure, he supports his conclusions from common human experience alone.
Recently, philosophers of religion – such as Richard Swinburne, William Hasker, and William Lane
Craig – have used Richard’s trinitarian reflection as a springboard for constructive work in
apologetics and ramified natural theology. Additionally, medieval and Victorine scholars have
increasingly recognized the novelty and rigour of Richard’s contribution to trinitarian
philosophical-theology. However, to date there has been no dedicated study of the heart of
Richard’s project in ‘De Trinitate’. In this thesis I offer an historically informed exposition of
Richard’s argument for the necessity of the Trinity, as well as philosophically informed analysis.
Further, I address some of the most pressing concerns with Richard’s argument. Richard’s work
is not only suggestive, but highly compelling. If sound, it is situated to contribute to the
contemporary philosophical and theological trinitarian discussion. I conclude by considering its
application for (so called) Latin and Social, as well as heterodox, trinitarian theologies.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Embargo Date: 2027-04-11
Embargo Reason: Thesis restricted in accordance with University regulations. Restricted until 11th April 2027
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