The following is a recollection penned by a Franciscan Friar, one Brendan of Dublin, a physician trained at Oxford, Montpellier, and Bologna, and serving the Court in England. It recounts a trip to visit William of Ockham in the Spring of 1347, just prior to the massive outbreak of the plague. This is a translation from the original Latin, although it has been converted into a twenty-first century American-English dialect. Certain phrases were difficult to translate and certain English words are employed to best reflect the mid-Fourteenth Century intent.
It was the Spring of 1347, and I went to see Ockham on my
way to Prague. He was still being protected by Ludwig and resided in his castle
grounds in Munich. I had left London in early February, and had a rough
crossing of the Channel and then a circuitous route down the Rhine, then cross
to Munich. It was a six week journey when I arrived in mid-March, and Spring
had yet to arrive. Ludwig was at war with some and aligned with others. He was
close with Edward, King of England, and this allowed him some leverage, since
he had positioned himself against the French King John, the rather stumbling
egoist who was attempting to rule France. Although I was off to see King
Charles in Prague, a putative adversary of Ludwig, as a Friar I could hopefully
navigate amongst these competing players. The Battle of Crecy had been a bloody
mess with so many killed and yet there was no peace between England and France.
It encompassed almost all the Principalities and Kingdoms in Christendom.
Added to this was the continual turmoil in Avignon with the
Popes in residence. John XXII was dead several years now and despite attempts
to come back to a sense of normality after his extremely arrogant dicta, some
thought his rulings even heretical, and having the Bishop of Rome appointed by
French Cardinals rather than the people of Rome, had always been a stumbling
block. Worse yet, this Bishop of Rome refused to go to Rome. Instead this Bishop
built a massive castle in Avignon, surrounded by riches and staffed with enough
people to populate a small country.
It was Ockham, my old teacher and friend, who had spent the
last twenty years under the protection of Ludwig, with his writings had
introduced concepts in political governance, secular as well as religious,
which I saw as the basis for dramatic changes, whose time would eventually come.
Ockham had examined several areas whose influence was slowly
penetrating the minds and thoughts of those would in turn were to spread it
across our domains. First was his understanding of nominalism. Namely that
there are only individuals, and there is no ultimate single essence, man is
nothing more than a collection of people, men and women, and there is no
abstract whose existence we refer all to. Namely individuals are the elements
of the world, and individuals who are born free, no matter what their ultimate
state may be, individuals who are equal as humans.
Second, the derivation from the poverty debate with the
Pope. Namely, poverty if it were to be observed needed to have a clear
definition of property, and property meant the understanding of rights. Rights
in turn linked to individuals, since ownership inured to a person not some
class.
Third, was the concept of how our leaders should be chosen,
namely by the people. For it was for centuries that the Pope was the Bishop of
Rome selected by the people of Rome. The people selected a Pope, a leader. Now
we had a "Pope" selected by a class of incentivized
"Cardinals" who were also selected by Kings and Princes in most
cases.
Fourth, and furthermore, the Pope had managed to interject
himself into secular matters in contradistinction to the Gospel.
Fifth and finally Ockham had stressed Faith and the Bible as
the two elements of our religious belief. It was not to be left to the
complexities of reason as attempted by Aquinas and the Bible is and must always
be the cornerstone of what we believe in.
These elements had been mulling in my mind over the past
decades, even though my focus as a Friar was to be a physician to the body,
rich and poor alike, but Ockham was always in the back of my mind. He had a
sense of clarity and a sense of correctness that was overwhelming. All one had
to do was to see to what irrational ends John XXII went to try to silence him,
and then to see that Ockham's assertion of the heresy of such actions of John,
for all this was enlightening. The Pope was not infallible, he was a man and as
a man prone to error. As our Saint Francis has said to his followers more than
a century ago, we must follow our vows of poverty and chastity, and we must be
obedient only to the extent that it does not conflict with our Faith. Obedience
for Francis was the delimited vow, poverty and chastity had bright lines.
Francis also was a believer of the individual. Charity was an
individual to another individual. It was not the "Church" as a group,
nor the "King" as a ruler to dispense to the poor. My practice of medicine
was a "giving" to the individual whose body I served as a healer.
I thus looked forward to seeing Ockham again. I suspected
that like many of us he was aging, and although a somewhat healthy man he was
always somewhat on the frail side. Ockham resided in a residence aside the main
castle. Munich was an interesting city, it has its strong Germanic ties, and
the people were themselves Germanic but lively. They lived in relative peace
and there were many craftsman resident in the city. What amazed me each time I
came here was that beer was consumed like water. There were open halls where
men would congregate and consume what appeared to be volumes. Even in winter
one saw this phenomenon.
I came to Ockham's residence and asked the young man who
greeted me for Ockham and told him who I was. In a matter of mere seconds
Ockham came forth with a great smile on his face. I was a bit set aback because
the gaunt man I knew well had put upon himself a great girth. I gathered it may
have been the beer. Yet it may also have been the proximity to good food and
the lack of the arduous travel I have set myself upon over the years. He was
cheerful, a ruddy face with a grey beard, and he retained his tonsured and word
his Franciscan attire. We embraced and he ushered me to the rear, which was a
small room with a fire looking out onto a small garden area, still barren from
the winter.
We sat down in front of a large fireplace in a heavily
beamed room. It was warm, pleasant, and a far cry from the rather Spartan
quarters we had in London at Greyfriars. Ockham asked how I was doing and what
news I had. I recounted the past few years and he was a bit surprised as to my
proximity to King Edward. I reminded him that I had spent time as his tutor and
knew his mother, the Dowager Queen. Ockham expressed his concern as to Isabella
and her reputation as a rebel who had worked to overthrow her husband with her
lover, Mortimer. I muted my reply saying that royalty seems always to be at
each other's throats. Ockham smiled and said it reminded him of theologians as
well. I smiled and said it did, the difference is that royalty hacks each other
to death, theologians burn each other to death! To that he let out a hearty
laugh. I let it sink in a bit and then continued:
"Yet William, although Royalty use the ax, sword, and
arrow as means to death, they fight equally, no side claiming Divine
correctness. In contrast, and perhaps this is from my associations with Gui and
the Inquisition, the battle between believers, over differences in
interpretation, is a bit one sided, with the Church having the ultimate say,
and any new voice silenced by fire."
His smile disappeared and he looked at me and replied:
"I know that all too well. Yet I have continued to
write, excommunication and all. Now tell me, I gather you were at the Battle of
Crecy, a bit of a hero on the battle field, a physician at war, so they say.
Tell me some details."
I now began to understand the phrase, "War
stories". Those not there want to hear what they want to hear, perhaps
glory, perhaps fine deeds. I replied:
"William, I was there as a physician to the King and
his son the Prince of Wales. Yet the brutal battles, the blood shedding, the
dismemberment, left me more as a priest administering Last Rights to dying men than
a physician healing wounds. William, there is no glory in war, no dignity in a
battle. The Knights take glory of a conflict, in the killing of an adversary.
In reality it is an argument between two men, the King of England and King of
France, over who is to claim what under what conditions. All that will change
with the next succession, yet men go to kill each other. The reality as I saw
it was that the battle enriched hose who survived, taking whatever they could,
and often choosing who they would slay based upon what they could get in ransom
if they kept their captive alive. On one hand it was a battle of Kings, on the
other, and this I believe is the true reality, it was a barbarian assault of
one group upon another. The men at arms as they went to battle, and then upon
their return, took freely from those whose lands were in their path. They
committed acts that they confessed as they died in my arms, and as a priest I
gave them absolution, knowing full well that these men if allowed to live by
God, would continue their barbaric acts on a successful return. William, war
brings out the evils of the human soul, and I can do more as a physician than
as a priest, that at times is truly terrifying. The beasts of the forest are
often more gentle that a good Christian soldier."
I gathered that Ockham was a bit taken aback by my response.
It had been but a year from Crecy but I, at times, still has the scent of the
spilled human blood in my nostrils, the sight of hacked limbs in my eyes, and
the screams of dying men in my ears.
We sat quietly for a while, Ockham drinking a large stein of
beer, and I a cup of a white wine, for I never truly had a taste for beer, the
drink that was everywhere. I then told him of my travel to Prague and my
meeting of King Charles. He said he had never been to Prague and that he heard
it was a beautiful place. He knew little of the Czechs, the Slavic people, yet
he did indicate they were unlike the Germans, more quiet and thoughtful. We had
dinner and rested.
Over the next few days we had long conversations regarding
the development of his thought. My objective was to distill what he had
developed in a manner in which I may be able to convey to other people, those
not trained in the Scholastic manner. Ockham's work was elegant but ponderous,
enlightening, but demanding too great a preparation to absorb. The following
recounts my discussions. I have left it in a dialog manner to demonstrate my
own need for clarity. Although trained under Ockham, my reach was as a Bachelor
of Arts, a mere tyro in a land of giants. Yet perhaps to spread his insight,
such a simplification was demanded. Besides, as I was to spend time in Prague
with Charles and the many who would come and go there, this would be an
opportunity to develop a precis, as accurately as I could, regarding Ockham and
his work.
We started our discussion on his now somewhat accepted
understanding of nominalism. I began by phrasing what I saw as his proposition:
"William, as I recall, your acceptance of nominalism,
namely that there are no universals and that the terms we general use as a
universal is nothing more than a name, thus nominal. There is no ideal
"red rose", there is only this red rose and that red rose. That the
accident of redness is merely an attribute of a specific red rose and not a
manifestation of some ideal, some abstract essence of redness. Is that a
reasonable approach to your thought?"
Ockham replied:
"Yes. One can also say that "The red rose is a
plant" and yet this does not imply the existence of some universal essence
called a plant. It is a plant because it has a root, it grew from a seed, in a
soil, and it needs the sun to exist. Now even more deeply, it needs this
specific soil, or perhaps that soil over there. It needs a specific embodiment
of soil, not a universal called soil. Indeed the universal does not exist. It
is not the argument between Plato and Aristotle, that the universal flow from
the individuals or the individuals are manifestations of the universals. There
are just individuals. The rest are just names we throw about to try to get the
listener to stay attuned to what we are arguing or explaining. Redness is an
abstraction, the reality is the specific red we observe. Remember that when we
say red, we can hold in front of our eyes say a dozen roses, and each we call
red, but each may be slightly different from each other."
"Then is it fair to say that the redness of the rose is
the result of what specific rose plant I have, and what sol I have grown it in,
and how much I may have watered it, and how much sun it is exposed to?" I
continued, "Thus indicating that the redness is an accident at best but
one based upon some specific set of processes in the growth of the flower over
time."
"Interesting" he replied, "Indeed we can
always take this accident related to color and explain it more so in terms of
things, individual things, that impact and result in that color. Yes indeed,
this is a good simple example."
"Now on to the issue of Individualism." I replied,
"You have essentially used the term regarding individuals as individualism.
The meaning here is that each human is an individual, and individual person.
You then investigate this inn terms of individual rights, or Natural Rights
coming from Natural Law. You also argue if I am correct that the Bible focuses
on individual salvation, individual good deeds, individual redemption. Christ
did not demand that Rome and the Emperor follow the Gospel teachings, only
those who were individual Christians. In fact the Gospel teaching separates the
Church and the State, more so, the individual's commitment to God from the
individuals commitment to Rome or the State. It was even Saint Francis who in
his rule of obedience gave a caution that the individual member of the order
would have to make the individual decision. Finally, in the argument regarding
poverty, it was driven by the individual possession and use of property, use
such as consumption of food, and ownership of that food. It was the individual
member of the Order, be they a Friar, a Third Order, a Poor Sister, we were
equally and individually so obliged. From this amalgam of insights, we then can
understand that the individual person, be they man or woman, free or slave,
have a duty but moreover we have individual rights, Natural Rights, given
equally by God to all people. Is that a reasonable articulation of what you
have said William?"
He sat back and smiled. He then said:
"Brendan, you have simplified my many words, you sound like a preacher. Yes that is the non-academic answer."
"Brendan, you have simplified my many words, you sound like a preacher. Yes that is the non-academic answer."
I then replied:
"The advantage that one has with many hours riding a
horse, a boat, waiting in a battle field, is that one thinks. I have tried from
time to time to explain your thinking, but I learned that most men have to be
fed simple yet compelling ideas. The do not sit for long periods of
contemplation. I have an opportunity with King Charles to perhaps convey some
of these ideas, yet simply. I have tried in the Court of Edward, not the best
place to convey my thoughts, I have even tried with good Queen Isabella, the
strongest supporter of royalty I have seen, but a willing listener."
"Your approach, William, takes a person from a subject
to a citizen, from a part of a collection to a separate and independent
individual. As Marsilius of Padua had also noted, I believe, the individual has
both status and rights."
"Indeed" replied Ockham, "And there is both a
civil as well as theological issue here. For being just a subject one has to
obey no matter what. As a citizen, one has a duty and in return certain rights.
Thus a Knight may have a duty to serve the Lord but he in return has the right
to ownership in land. The same is our relationship with God. It is the
individual who has that relationship as, if you will, a citizen in the family
of Christ. We are held individually to account for our deeds. We are
individually given Grace for redemption."
"Then I would ask, if this is the case, why then do we
have such a concern for Original Sin?" I asked, "Why have this
communal guilt for which Christ came and died for us? After all we as an
individual, with no nexus to our deep dark past, may have had no part in that
sin, and thus how does one look back and retain that sin?"
"Your question has merit. But allow me to return to it
when we discuss Faith. The day is long, I am getting old. Perhaps a good
dinner?" Ockham smiled and went forth to eat.
We spent a bit longer simplifying the idea of individualism.
It was not an idea of selfishness, not an idea of separation, but an idea of individual
duties and rights. Duties as regards to the understanding of what the
individual was obliged under the law of the land and the law of God. The rights
were rights rendered by God to the individual. These were Natural Rights. There
were other rights, such as those that the King or other ruler may give to their
subjects, but those were not Natural Rights, they could be taken away, changed,
or even negated without reason. Natural Rights superseded these and were the
result of Natural Law.
I began by asking Ockham:
"William, in your work, Decretum, you articulate three
types of Natural Law. May we discuss them a bit. I understand that a great deal
of your motivation was directed at the choosing of and powers relegated to a
Pope. But let us leave that to the side for a moment, let us discuss just the
definitions of natural Law, and then we can move to Natural Rights."
Ockham replied:
"Excellent, this is always a complex issue but a
critical one for the understanding of the Pope and his powers."
"There are three types or understandings of Natural
Law. The first understanding is based upon law in conformity with natural
reason which never fails. Gratian uses this definition. It means that
"thou shall not kill" is understood by all by means of our natural
reason as a human. This First Natural Law definition is one concomitant with
the existence of humans."
I interjected:
"However, and excuse me if I am inferring incorrectly,
but your define Natural Law as something from Natural Reason. This seems to me
to have the risk of circular logic, for in both cases the predicate
"Natural" infers it is part of our nature as a human, all humans. You
then relate it to say, "Do not kill" and unfortunately I have seen
much too much slaughter. It thus raises two questions. First if something is
"Natural" then it must be inherent in our nature, and our nature must
somehow be the same in all humans. Does this not then conflict with
individuals? My second point, is that again if in all humans, we see what we
understand to be humans slaughtering incessantly then are then they not humans
or are they then just sinning all the time?"
Ockham smiled and replied:
"Brendan, you have spent too much time in the real
world. Let me continue with my other two definitions. You raise valid concerns.
On the second, yes indeed this is sinful, unless it is dealt with as an unjust
aggressor issue. That you know. It is the basis of a valid war. The first
question is perhaps at first sight circular, but as we would have started with
natural reason as a philosophical construct we would not have found a circular
reasoning. Let me continue to the issue of the other definitions."
He continued:
"The Second Natural Law is the one where one uses only
natural equity without reference to any human law or custom. For example it is
the law that was present in nature when first initiated. It was the law at the
time of the Fall of Man, yet this Natural Law definition can be mutable. Again
the definition here is as Rufinus and others has agreed to. It may be
disturbing as to its mutability. And yes Brendan, it relies on natural equity,
fairness, or even justice if you will. My usage here is I believe consistent
with the Gratian and the Decretum. But here in the Second Natural Law, that
consistent with the Decretum, I also find that one sees that such things as
property were thus created after the Fall, were part of the evolving Natural
Law."
"Now the Third Natural Law builds upon the above two.
In this case Natural Law is defined as that which can be ascertained by evident
reason from the law of nations or some other law or even from some divine or
human act, unless the evidently contrary can be established by those concerned.
This I call the natural law by supposition. This is a conditional natural law,
derived from rational responses to contingent situations. I was to understand
this from a statement by Isidore of Seville. He noted that "the common
possession of all things" and "the return of a thing deposited or
money loaned" These he relates to Natural Law. Thus this refers to
property, to the individual ownership of property. Moreover the repayment
refers thusly to actual private property. Finally, private property as
instituted by man. We thus have both common property by understanding the
Second Natural Law and private property as understanding the Third Natural Law.
Private property is an alienation concept, the taking of what was in common and
making it private. Yet it is a Natural Law. A law based upon a temporal
evolution of agreed principles with agreed to equity. As I will argue later,
this Third Natural Law also is the basis by which we individuals have the right
to elect our leaders, civil and spiritual."
I replied:
"I believe we can relate this one. Yet there is a
concerning note. You state that it may be changed if "the contrary to
those concerned". Thus this Natural Law is not only a contingent law but
one which is changeable, and changeable by those concerned, namely I would
gather the people?"
"Yes and the point then leads to the understanding of
Natural Rights." Ockham replied. "If one can alienate, change,
refine, then one has a right. Can you see where I am going? I am working with
those who came before, working within the law as we know it, consistent with
the Bible, and from this we can now start to understand the scope of Natural
Law and from it the clear presence of Natural Rights. A very basic right is to
elect our leaders. That include the Pope, as was the case from the time of
Christ. We elect the leader, not some appointment by those of political
stance."
I returned to the issue which had led to the fact that
Ockham was here in Munich and not back at Oxford. Namely the issue of poverty,
and the driving issue of property and use versus ownership. Until John XXII
entered the fray, Franciscans and the Pope were satisfied with the vow of
poverty as one where Franciscans had use of things but their ownership was held
by the Pope. Now I always felt that this was a splitting of hairs but everyone
was comfortable. It was when the conservative Franciscans, called the
Spirituals, took the position that poverty was the way of Jesus and the
Apostles and it was that way that they were following. That put John XXII in a
bit of a tight spot. Here he was turning Avignon into a palatial estate, a
castle to compete with any King or Emperor, clothes that shamed all of them,
jewels, food, wines, while the poor wandered about helpless. The Spirituals
walked about barefoot and with rags, often unclean as well. As Franciscans we spent
our time not in a monetary hidden from the world but as an integral part of it.
As a physician I was intimately so involved. Ockham was an academic and not
truly a Spiritual but when he saw the arguments that the Pope was promulgating
he began to study it and in no time saw the Pope was in error.
Ockham being Ockham then went and exposed this to the Pope,
as well as the Order, and then all Hell broke loose. Popes as it would seem do
not like being told they are wrong, after all they are Popes. Academics also enjoy
an intellectual battle. Thus off it went. But no sooner than telling the Pope
he was wrong, and having is reasonable well accepted the Pope rebelled. But to
Ockham, and many others, this made the Pope a heretic. Thus did Ockham state.
On to Munich he went. Excommunicated. But many felt Ockham was correct. The
Pope is a man, he can err, and he is not infallible. Popes have made errors
again and again, and if precedent is any claim, then Popes seems to err more
frequently than most. Yet one does not tell the Pope this to his face,
especially an English Friar to a French Cardinal, now Pope.
I had gotten to know John, the current Pope, quite well when
I worked with Umberto Gui, helping him with those who were ill. John was
imperious, arrogant, and prone to dicta which were baseless in fact but
subsumed in form. He knew the techniques of a Canon lawyer, the Code of
Justinian, the twists and turns of battles at court. None of that related to
reality. Frankly many who I knew about this man disliked him, yet the feigned
recognition as well as adulation. That was the way at Court, it was the way at
Avignon.
I replied:
"William, it would be of interest to consider the
following. It is an example from commerce called bailment. Bailment is the
process whereby a third party take possession but not ownership of an item. For
example, my mother's family had ships, and they carried goods from Bristol to
Marseille or Brest or Bordeaux. At no time did they "own" the
property, they just held it in the possession to transport. At the other end
another party held a contract to receive the property in payment. Then my uncle
for example would return with the payment, which may have been other goods,
again having possession but not ownership. Now consider the case of the "locked
chest", tried at Court in 1315 under Edward II.
The locked chest case was one where the bailee had a chest
which was locked and the goods or property was in the locked chest. The chest
was stolen but while locked. If the goods had been stolen with the chest open
the bailee was liable but since the chest was closed when stolen then the
bailee had kept his duty and was not liable. Thus in the understanding is that
if the bailee keeps his duty of care and security then he has no liability if
the property is lost or stolen. However it does not release the bailee or
carrier from a duty. The have been several other similar cases recently just
before my departure under Edward III our current King. Specifically the case
was of a pledge which came up, which seems always to have been regarded as a
special bailment to keep as one's own goods.
The defense was, that the goods were stolen with the
defendant's own. The plaintiff was driven to reply a tender before the theft,
which would have put an end to the pledge, and left the defendant a general
bailee. The issue was taken which confirms the other cases, by implying that in
that event the defendant would be liable. Thus the issue of property and
possession is a key to commerce and frankly it supports your position regarding
Franciscan poverty! Frankly it may also presage why England may develop an
excellent system of commerce, where in France the rules are still too complex
and dated."
Ockham replied:
"Yes, I see, and this is an example of the law being
reflective of the Third Natural Law definition. It is reflexive and adjustable.
As new facts are ascertained it adapts to the facts. This is an intriguing
approach, yet so foreign to Roman Law, or worse Canon Law. Gratian would never
have considered this. It is a law of cases not of codes. The Civil Law tends to
have the ability therefore to adapt. The basic Law from the Bible provides core
elements but it too is open to interpretation. One must just think of the tale
of the prostitute who sought forgiveness, of the thief who sought the same at
the crucifixion."
He continued:
"If you recall, part of my arguments were related to
two issues. The right of use, or ius utendi, was the legal right of an
individual, one not expressly not the owner, to utilize some external entity,
which if not warranted by the owner would be illegal. The second id ownership
itself, or dominium, which is the right of the individual owner who lays claim
to an entity and furthermore has the right to deny access or use by any third
party. You see that here I have included two elements. First the element of the
individual, for the property has been now associated with this person, not the
Prince, the Lord, the state, but the very singular person. Second, and this I
believe is most critical, is the fact that this is a right, in fact a Natural
Right, as we have already discussed. If everything was common in the Garden of
Eden as is understood, then after the Fall, mankind began to acquire individual
ownership, usually perforce of labor, such as the clearing of a field, the
planting of a crop, the raising of a sheep, the building of a house. The result
then of man's actions was ownership, by the individual, and then the natural
right resulting from that action allowed for an alienation in the use by
others."
We would spend time discussing rulers and their powers. I
recall my discussing with him my observations of the city states in Italy. I
stated:
"William, I understand some of your thoughts on rulers
and their powers, and what is the best form of rulers. But allow me to give you
some observations which I have made in my travels. As you know, I had spent
time in Bologna, and as I went about the northern cities in Italy, I found a
new form of rule, let us call it leadership. People chose their rulers, not
everyone participated in the process, but it often was enough to make many feel
they had a voice. Rulers thusly chosen
had then a sense that their duty was to the people whom they governed. Unlike
Kings, who often believe that they have a Divine Right of ruling, somehow being
chosen by God, and the result is that their acts are beyond reproach."
Ockham replied:
"You are aware that it my contention that monarchy is
the best form of governing. My reasons are many, but ultimately it comes down
to the inability of the masses to act reasonably. The masses become the mob and
mob rule is always the worst kind. Your argument of city states has merit, but
it does so because of two reasons. First the populace in those states who
select their leaders are educated and enlightened. The selection is not open to
all, only those who have an interest in good governing. The second reason is
size. These are rulers of city states, small with common interests. Now take
England, a King must deal with a massive and disparate set of interests. He
cannot reflect the interests necessarily of all, but must seek a common good.
Furthermore in England, France, and many other locales, the people have no
knowledge of what the needs of a kingdom are, they see at most their local and
personal needs, their individual needs if you will."
"Brendan, you recall my fundamental thesis. The people
cannot render more power to a ruler than that which they possess themselves.
There are thus limits to the power of any ruler. The people fundamentally have conveyed
willing the power to a ruler, if that ruler be selected directly by them or via
kingship, or even if you will the Pope himself."
I interjected:
"But William, as regards to a Pope, we have the
biblical dictum that Peter has the power to bind, namely Christ has given
Peter, and perforce of continuity, the Pope a set of powers supra to that of a
civil ruler. For in Mathew 18:18 we have:
Verily I say to you, Whatsoever ye shall bind on the
earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatsoever ye shall loose on the earth
shall be loosed in heaven.
How then can we delimit the powers of a Pope? Does this not
give to a Pope almost an unlimited power?"
Ockham replied:
"Your point has been well taken. In my work Contra
Benedictum and An princeps I noted that it is accepted Canon Law, as evidenced
in Gratian, that evangelical liberty limited papal power. The very natural and
civil rights we possess delimit the powers as presented under Mathew. If this
were unlimited power, religious and civil, then the Pope could overthrow a
King, and in contrast Christ also said to give to God what is God's and to
Caesar what is Caesar's. There is a natural liberty whereby men are free and
not slaves. In Dialogus I extended this by the argument with my Student, my
interlocutor. The Pope cannot regulate or command things, that would be against
our liberty, our free will. Each individual gains or loses redemption by their
individual acts, by their individual choices. Not by Papal dicta.
After discussing civil rulers we had finally got to the
ultimate ruler, the Pope. I had read and re-read Ockham's "Work of Ninety
Days", the brutal and brilliant response to John XXII attack on the
Franciscans. It left any who read it with the clear understanding of John's
heresy and of Ockham's correctness. It was so compelling that the Popes would
pretend it did not exist so as not to confront it.
I began by asking:
"William, when discussing the Papacy you said:
We are left with the conclusion that papal principate was
instituted for the utility of its subjects and not for its own utility or
honour, and. in consequence is worthy to be called not 'of lordship' but 'of
service' ٠ In which ... it is assimilated (more than
any worldly principate instituted in practice) to the most noble form of royal
principate ... and m which it excels all other principates in dignity.
This clearly is consistent with what Gregory I said of
himself, namely he was the "Servant of the Servants of God". Namely
he was there for the utility of the Faithful, not to rule them. He eschewed the
trappings of a religious ruler, at least in his sayings. He entered into
dialogue with those with whom he disagreed. The most famous to us Irish is he dialogue
with Columbanus on the argument on the choice of the date of Easter. Columbanus
and the Irish state, at the time the only remaining stable and educated state
in what was left of the Western world, sided with the Greek Patriarchs, and it
was Gregory who stood alone, rejecting their selection of a date. But that
debate became a debate on frankly a scientific basis of a new calendar, solar
versus lunar, and Columbanus gracefully acceded to Gregory. Thus we have a
clear precedent of Papal authority and behavior. Yet we have had Popes since
who have taken the "purple" if you will. Whereas Gregory was a
Benedictine, eschewing the riches, John XXII was regal, and covering himself
and his office with unlimited wealth. How do the Faithful come to deal with the
changing disparity?"
His response:
"We have a Pope, and originally that Pope was the
Bishop of Rome, and that Bishop was selected as were all Bishops by the people
they represented. Like your City State examples Brendan. For Gregory I was
himself so selected, despite his please against being so. Yet Gregory was also
delimited by the Emperor in Constantinople. So with Gregory we have an example
of a saintly monk, selected by his people, approved by his Emperor. Now we have
a Pope selected by Cardinals which in turn he has the authority to appoint. It
is circular reasoning, and the Pope now tells the Emperor what to do, and
unlike Gregory sees all the Faithful as his servants. The Pope does not see
individuals, he sees a mass of people who must comply with his every word, and
that often includes the controlling of Kings and Princes. Just look at Ludwig,
he was duly appointed but Pope John did not want him. What power does the Pope
have to overthrow a leader? Frankly what power does a Pope have over any leader.
The leader is an individual and has a moral responsibility as an individual.
The King will face God alone, not with his armies."
It was clear that as Ockham spoke he had not only hardened
his position but had dramatically strengthened it as well. We began a
discussion regarding faith and reason. Ockham commenced:
"Brendan, you have known for quite a while the limits
of human reason, do you not?"
I replied:
"William, more now than ever. I am a physician by
practice and education. Unlike many, I have taken a Bacon like approach, namely
I must observe what is there, not just rely upon what is written, and less upon
reason. Medicine is akin to philosophy. It often rested upon the ancients. But
for example, when at Bologna, under Mondino, we studied anatomy, and in that
context I saw things that Galen had said which were false. Had I relied upon
Galen and just reason, rather than facts, I would have made great errors. For
example, I have seen men whose hearts are on the right side, very few, but they
exist. Reason would have told me otherwise. Actually hearing and feeling and
understanding tells me otherwise. There are many things which are well beyond
reason. Cancers, the growths that kill, I have seen many, what is their cause,
how do I treat them. They are not a result of bad humors, that are unknown but
I firmly believe are knowable, yet only with a better understanding of the
facts. Moreover, permit me an example. Tools, instruments, which allow me to
examine what before one could not see. Each time I get a new tool, such as a
lens, I can see more and understand more. It is the reality of what I observer
rather than the internal process of just reason which allows me to expand my
understanding.
Ockham replied:
"Yes then I have asserted that human reason is not up
to many tasks and especially many that relate to our religion. I take the
example of the Trinity. It lies beyond any reason. The same holds for the Eucharist.
The complexity of the Trinity requires, no demands, faith, not reason. In the
case of the Eucharist one believes via Faith that Christ is present. To reason
a process which we cannot either understand no less demonstrate makes the
result a farce. Thus sola fide, by faith alone, do we come to this and
many other mysteries of the Faith. We have had many, especially amongst the
Dominicans, who try to create what are at best word games to explain these
Mysteries. They are Mysteries of Faith and by Faith alone can we accept
them."
"In many such cases we see a dilemma." I replied,
"A dilemma in that adherence demands belief but that belief is to be
buttressed by reason, and yet faith abandons reason and is then the only door
to belief. We must abandon reason, and thus our very humanity if you will, if
not also our very individualism. Are you saying then that we must accept all
just by faith?"
"No," he replied, "like you and your
medicine, reason is a tool, to use the tool you need something tangible to work
upon. Your lens is an example. You mention the man sick with what you say are
worms. You can examine his droppings without a tool and you see nothing. There
are no worms. Yet you use the lens as a tool and you get to see the worms, what
was small is now large, what was unseen is now seen. In my view faith is such a
tool. What was unseen in the Trinity, faith allows us to see, what was
unfathomable in the Eucharist, faith allows us to accept. Moreover as you note,
these tools evolve, improve, overtime, and as we the Faithful do likewise, we
will be better able, through Faith, to grasp these facts of our belief."
As we got to the end of our discussions I raised a critical
issue with Ockham. Namely the issue of words and their meaning, especially as
they may change over time. I began by asking Ockham the following:
"William, as we have been discussing these issues, and I
believe that now in our later years they become more clear and concise, I have
noticed that we often use words, such as ius, in a manner which is not
necessarily what it may have meant not a millennia ago but even a century ago. As
such this raises several issues. First, and this is most critical, when reading
the Bible, are we seeking understanding in the words as they are understood now
or as they were understood then? Furthermore, if we seek clarity, who has such
clarity to give, a Pope, a Council, or is it to be left to each person. All
have faults, all are subject to error. Second, when looking to the Bible as
God's word, we look at translations. Not only in Latin do words change over
time, namely the same word gets a different meaning, but in translating we get
a double problem; first the selection of a Latin word for a Hebrew or Greek
word, and then the time at which the Latin word was selected may have been of
such a past that we no longer accept its meaning now. How do we ever try to
reconciles these issues?"
"You raise a very good point. I give you a simple
example. Take the word fundus, a field, a piece of land. To the Romans a fundus
was not just the earth, the field, but it entailed all rights we have to a
field." he continued, "Yet to may in our current time, depending on
where one lives, it is merely a thing, a piece of land, and the rights of use
accrue from laws which are enacted apart from the piece of dirt. We have
managed to separate rights and even obligations from the thing itself. Thus in
this simple example, we are using the simple word fundus and over time its meaning
has changed dramatically."
I responded:
"Then it is important to understand that time, and in a
sense history if you will, is a progression and reflection of human
understanding. The more we learn, and even the more we may forget, changes the
way we see the world, the meanings we give to words, which are merely a
reflection of our combined understanding of this reality."
As we finished our discussions on philosophical issues
Ockham proceeded to ask me about the wars. He had heard a great deal but he had
never been a part of a battle, had not seen the carnage that I had. As a
philosopher he inquired about the issue of a "just war" which was the
theologians way to justify this carnage. This was not an area for which he had
any exposure or understanding, and mine was limited to that of a physician
trying to heal or as a priest trying to comfort.
I told Ockham:
"William, war is as close to hell as one can consider.
One side attacks the other. That I can see, armed men trying to overcome one
another. But what I cannot understand is the brutality on poor people, unarmed
peasants, where the men at arms ride horses, setting fire to homes, crops,
killing the farm animals, poisoning the water, salting fields. This is a tactic
to deprive the Lords and Kings from profiting from the taxes on these poor
people. Frankly William I can see how there could ultimately be a revolt, a
revolt against the privileged Knights and Lords, whose sole interest is
self-aggrandizement."
Ockham's response was as one would expect from a theologian
and philosopher. He came back with the "just war" theory. He said to
me:
"Brendan, I understand your intensity. But often war is
justified. Is it not, to defend one's own subjects. From my understanding a war
is just if it were to meet the five requirement. Permit me to discuss them.
They are persona, res, causa, animus and auctoritas. That is the persona must
not be religious. I assume that you were brandishing a sword. The second is
res, the fundamental cause of the action would be defence of the country or the
seeking return of a purloined possession or person, causa was the necessity of
the act of war in that there was no other alternative, animus or the spirit in
which the war was executed was to be one of justice and avoiding hatred and
unjust acts, and finally auctoritas, namely the war must be waged under the
authority of a prince or similar accepted lord. If these are met then is not
this a moral and just act?"
I replied:
"William, in a world where all is logic and all men are
rational and act according to both reason and God's law, then yes, a just war
exists and can be a moral act. But I have seen men act as beasts, nay beasts
are more kind and moral. God does not permit the bear or wolf to slaughter for
pleasure, leaving decaying men, women and children in barren fields. The
chevauchees wherein the men at arms ride their massive steeds through peasant
lands slaughtering all violates the very rules you have just presented. Yet the
Popes never protest. In fact the Popes often embolden the Lords in such acts as
they do in attacks in Crusades. The result is often bilateral butchery. Then
again, William, who is to say that the cause of action is correct and not just
an excuse to engage in war, is the decision of a cause solely in the eyes of
the beholder? As to the causa, the necessity to act if you will, if there be a
just cause is there then a true necessity to act, that there is not
alternative. I await the day when a Pope leads an army! Indeed, with some of the Bishops and Cardinals
in the Italian states, I can see that as a possibility also. That would I
believe be a fundamental violation of the persona clause, would it not?"
Ockham burst into laughter and noted:
"A Pope leading an army! Yes, that would perforce of
definition be an Unjust War!"
We both laughed but I privately wondered if the Church would
ever be exposed to such. I have seen Kings, Princes, leading charges, being slaughtered
and laying in pools of their own blood. I have heard the same voices from
Popes, and wondered what it would take to get them to the field of battle. At
least in Avignon they were too comfortable and not inclined to act personally.
Yet.
I would bade Ockham farewell soon as I went forward to
Prague. Spring was on its way and the Bavarian country side was just about to
turn green. I wondered how I would tell Charles some of these things. Kings are
not the best of listeners, and as we have found Popes are even less so. Thus
far I have seen three Popes, and John XXII was clearly the most intransigent. A
lawyer, Canon Lawyer, trained in the Justinian tradition with the Decretum of
Gratian. Ockham, a Theologian, and Philosopher. Each talking past each other,
each with strong egos. I knew enough to understand some of the moves, some of
the games. As one would say, my main task was as a physician, and yet even
there I could often do so little. I tried to follow Friar Bacon and his method
of scientific proof, namely deal with facts, observables. I took it a bit
further and tried to measure and quantify, compare and contrast, but always
built upon observables. The metaphysician has no solid ground, no independent
fact checker, the theologian in contrast has the Word of God, and the believer
has but Faith.