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Biography
Albert the Great was one of the
Church's greatest intellects. He studied at the University of Padua and later
taught at Hildesheim, Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Regensburg, and Strasbourg. He then
taught at the University of Paris, where he received his doctorate in 1245. He
was among the first and greatest of the natural scientists, gaining a reputation
for expertise in biology, chemistry, physics, astronomy, geography, metaphysics
and mathematics. He was also very learned in biblical studies and
theology.
Albertus Magnus
St. Albert's life spans the
better part of the thirteenth century (1200?-1280). Widely admired for his
wisdom and learning, he was known to his contemporaries as "Albertus
Magnus": Albert the Great. Subsequent generations, impressed by the breadth
of his learning, called him "Doctor universalis": Teacher of all
subjects. He was also the teacher of a rather singular student, St. Thomas
Aquinas, his "Dumb Ox" with a bellow for the ages.
St. Albert did study and teach a
wide variety of subjects, though not always for angelic pupils. Around 1250,
acting in religious obedience, he began the process of commenting the known
works of Aristotle. St. Albert's attempt to make the Greek philosopher
"intelligible to the Latins" filled twenty years of his life and
almost twice as many volumes! As a commentator, St. Albert is no slave to the
letter of Aristotle's texts. He uses them as a means of addressing intellectual
problems of more immediate relevance to his day. He draws on Arabic, Byzantine
and Greek traditions of commentary to do so. St. Albert's commentaries include
extensive "digressions" in which he at times drops altogether the
conceit of interpreting Aristotle. It helps to understand the latitude St.
Albert saw in his role as a commentator to recall that he wrote self-standing
treatises to "fill the gaps" in the Aristotelian corpus.
St. Albert is perhaps best
remembered for his life-long interest in the order and operation of the natural
world. It was in recognition of the discipline and godliness of this interest
that Pius XII declared Albert patron saint of "students of the natural
sciences" in his Apostolic Letter Ad Deum (16 December 1941). In fostering
devotion to St. Albert, the Holy See hoped to improve "the sad state of
affairs of our day when the latest advances of science are employed, unhappily,
not for God's praise and man's salvation, but to visit the calamities of war
even upon civilian centers and cities."
The feast day of St. Albert the
Great is November 15. |