Francisco Suárez (5 January 1548–25 September 1617) was a Spanish philosopher and theologian, generally regarded as having been the greatest scholastic after Thomas Aquinas.
He wrote on a wide variety of subjects, producing a vast amount of work (his complete works in Latin amount to twenty-six volumes). Suárez' writings include treatises on law, the relationship between church and state, metaphysics, and theology.
Suárez was regarded during his lifetime as being the greatest living philosopher and theologian, and given the nickname Doctor Eximius; Pope Gregory XIII attended his first lecture in Rome. Pope Paul V invited him to refute the errors of James I of England, and wished to retain him near his person, to profit by his knowledge. Philip II of Spain sent him to the University of Coimbra in order to give it prestige, and when Suárez visited the University of Barcelona, the doctors of the university went out to meet him wearing the insignia of their faculties.
After his death in Portugal (in either Lisbon or Coimbra) his reputation grew still greater, and he had a direct influence on such leading philosophers as Hugo Grotius, René Descartes, and Gottfried Leibniz.
On the vexed subject of universals, Suarez was a nominalist; he argued that we have direct knowledge only of individuals.
Human beings, argued Suárez, have a natural social nature bestowed upon them by god, and this includes the potential to make laws. When a political society is formed, therefore, its nature is chosen by the people involved, and they give their natural legislative power to their ruler. Because they gave this power, they have the right to take it back, to revolt against a ruler — but only if the ruler behaves badly towards them, and they're obliged to act moderately and justly. In particular, the people must refrain from killing the ruler, no matter how tyrannical he may have become.
If a government is imposed on people, on the other hand, they not only have the right to defend themselves by revolting against it, they are entitled to kill the tyrannical ruler.
1548 births | 1617 deaths | Roman Catholic philosophers | Spanish philosophers
Franciscus Suárez | Francisco Suárez | Francisco Suárez | Franciszek Suarez | Суарес, Франсиско | Francisco Suárez
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