Greco-Christian stream·Opera Omnia Sancti Thomae (Complete Works of Thomas Aquinas)·Summa Theologiae·Secunda Secundae·Q159. Cruelty
Source context
- Theme
- cruelty as a vice opposed to clemency and the due measure of punitive severity
- Soul-faculty
- Sentient Soul
Steiner
- GA 161, 1915-02-05Steiner notes that a desire for torment and need for cruelty can reside unnoticed in the astral body, unknown to the waking consciousness of the person who harbors it.
- GA 348, 1923-01-20Steiner distinguishes cruelty as a characteristic quality in itself from punishment, asserting that punishment as such has no valid spiritual basis.
- GA 172, 1916-11-18Steiner identifies a diffuse form of cruelty rooted in the subconscious as a widespread characteristic of modern thought-systems.
- GA 69d, 1914-03-29Steiner raises the question of how impulses such as hatred and cruelty can nonetheless yield a form of strength in the post-mortem condition, treating cruelty as a soul-force whose spiritual consequences require investigation.
Cross-tradition
- Aristotelian ethics (unmerciful excess)Aristotle's treatment of the brutal or bestial character (NE VII.1) provides a structural analogue to Aquinas's cruelty as the extreme of deficient clemency, locating cruelty beyond the ordinary range of vicious excess into a sub-human disorder of appetite.
- Stoic apatheia and natural lawStoic moral philosophy holds that excessive harshness in punishment violates the rational order of natural law, exhibiting cross-tradition congruence with Aquinas's framing of cruelty as a departure from right reason in the application of punitive justice.
Q159. Cruelty
Article 1
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.1] It would seem that cruelty is not opposed to clemency. For Seneca says (De Clementia ii, 4) that "those are said to be cruel who exceed in punishing," which is contrary to justice. Now clemency is reckoned a part, not of justice but of temperance. Therefore apparently cruelty is not opposed to clemency.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.1] Ad primum sic proceditur. 1. Videtur quod crudelitas non opponatur clementiæ. Dicit enim Seneca in II De clementia, cap. iv, quod « illi vocantur crudeles, 2 Opus istud D. Chrysostomo merito abjudicatur. qui excedunt modum in puniendo, » quod contrariatur justitiae. Clementia autem non ponitur pars justitiae, sed temperantiae. Ergo crudelitas non videtur opponi clementiae.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.2] Further, it is written (Jeremiah 6:23): "They are cruel, and will have no mercy"; so that cruelty would seem opposed to mercy. Now mercy is not the same as clemency, as stated above (157, 4, ad 3). Therefore cruelty is not opposed to clemency.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.2] 2. Præterea, Jerem., vi, 23, dicitur: Crudelis est et non miserebitur; et sic videtur quod crudelitas opponatur misericordiae. Sed misericordia non est idem clementiae, ut supra dictum est. Ergo crudelitas non opponitur clementiae.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.3] Further, clemency is concerned with the infliction of punishment, as stated above (Question 157, Article 1): whereas cruelty applies to the withdrawal of beneficence, according to Proverbs 11:17, "But he that is cruel casteth off even his own kindred." Therefore cruelty is not opposed to clemency.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.arg.3] 3. Præterea, clementia consideratur circa inflictionem pœnarum, ut dictum est. Sed crudelitas consideratur in subtractione beneficiorum, secundum illud Proverb., xi, 17: Qui autem crudelis est, etiam propinquos abjicit. Ergo crudelitas non opponitur clementiae.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.sc] Seneca says (De Clementia ii, 4) that "the opposite of clemency is cruelty, which is nothing else but hardness of heart in exacting punishment."
[II-II.q.159.a.1.sc] Sed contra est quod dicit Seneca in II De clementia, cap. iv, in princ., quod « opponitur clementiae crudelitas, quæ nihil aliud est quam atrocitas animi in exigendis pœnis. »
[II-II.q.159.a.1.co] Cruelty apparently takes its name from "cruditas" [rawness]. Now just as things when cooked and prepared are wont to have an agreeable and sweet savor, so when raw they have a disagreeable and bitter taste. Now it has been stated above (157, 3, ad 1; 4, ad 3) that clemency denotes a certain smoothness or sweetness of soul, whereby one is inclined to mitigate punishment. Hence cruelty is directly opposed to clemency.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.co] Respondeo dicendum, quod nomen crudelitatis a cruditate sumptum esse videtur. Sicut autem ea quæ sunt cocta et digesta, solent habere suavem et dulcem saporem, ita illa quæ sunt cruda, habent horribilem et asperum saporem. Dictum est autem supra, quod clementia importat quamdam animi lenitatem, sive dulcedinem, per quam aliquis est diminutivus pœnarum. Unde directe crudelitas clementiae opponitur.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.1] Just as it belongs to equity to mitigate punishment according to reason, while the sweetness of soul which inclines one to this belongs to clemency: so too, excess in punishing, as regards the external action, belongs to injustice; but as regards the hardness of heart, which makes one ready to increase punishment, belongs to cruelty.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.1] Ad primum ergo dicendum, quod sicut diminutio pœnarum quæ est secundum rationem, pertinet ad epicheiam; sed ipsa dulcedo affectus, ex qua homo ad hoc inclinatur, pertinet ad clementiam; ita etiam superexcessus pœnarum, quantum ad id quod exterius agitur, pertinet ad injustitiam; sed quantum ad austeritatem animi, per quam aliquis fit promptus ad pœnas augendas, pertinet ad crudelitatem.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.2] Mercy and clemency concur in this, that both shun and recoil from another's unhappiness, but in different ways. For it belongs to mercy [Cf. 30, 1] to relieve another's unhappiness by a beneficent action, while it belongs to clemency to mitigate another's unhappiness by the cessation of punishment. And since cruelty denotes excess in exacting punishment, it is more directly opposed to clemency than to mercy; yet on account of the mutual likeness of these virtues, cruelty is sometimes taken for mercilessness.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.2] Ad secundum dicendum, quod misericordia et clementia conveniunt in hoc quod utraque refugit et abhorret miseriam alienam; aliter tamen et aliter: nam ad misericordiam pertinet miseriae subvenire per beneficii collationem; ad clementiam autem pertinet miseriam diminuere per subtractionem pœnarum; et quia crudelitas superabundantiam in exigendis pœnis importat, directius opponitur clementiae quam misericordiae; tamen propter similitudinem harum virtutum accipitur quando crudelitas pro immisericordia. IV.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.3] Cruelty is there taken for mercilessness, which is lack of beneficence. We may also reply that withdrawal of beneficence is in itself a punishment.
[II-II.q.159.a.1.ad.3] Ad tertium dicendum, quod crudelitas ibi accipitur pro immisericordia, ad quam pertinet beneficia non largiri. Quamvis etiam dici possit quod ipsa beneficii subtractio quædam pœna est.
Article 2
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.1] It would seem that cruelty differs not from savagery or brutality. For seemingly one vice is opposed in one way to one virtue. Now both savagery and cruelty are opposed to clemency by way of excess. Therefore it would seem that savagery and cruelty are the same.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.1] Ad secundum sic proceditur. 4. Videtur quod crudelitas a sævitia sive feritate non differat. Uni enim virtuti ex una parte unum vitium videtur esse oppositum. Sed clementiae per superabundantiam opponitur et sævitia et crudelitas. Ergo videtur quod sævitia et crudelitas sint idem.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.2] Further, Isidore says (Etym. x) that "severity is as it were savagery with verity, because it holds to justice without attending to piety": so that savagery would seem to exclude that mitigation of punishment in delivering judgment which is demanded by piety. Now this has been stated to belong to cruelty (1, ad 1). Therefore cruelty is the same as savagery.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.2] 2. Præterea, Isidorus dicit in lib. X Etymolog., § 250, col. 394, t. 3, quod « severus dicitur quasi sævus verus; tenet enim sine pietate justitiam »; et sic sævitia videtur excludere remissionem pœnarum in judiciis; quod pertinet ad pietatem. Hoc autem dictum est, ad crudelitatem pertinere. Ergo crudelitas est idem quod sævitia.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.3] Further, just as there is a vice opposed to a virtue by way of excess, so is there a vice opposed to it by way of deficiency, which latter is opposed both to the virtue which is the mean, and to the vice which is in excess. Now the same vice pertaining to deficiency is opposed to both cruelty and savagery, namely remission or laxity. For Gregory says (Moral. xx, 5): "Let there be love, but not that which enervates, let there be severity, but without fury, let there be zeal without unseemly savagery, let there be piety without undue clemency." Therefore savagery is the same as cruelty.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.arg.3] 3. Præterea, sicut virtuti opponitur aliquod vitium in excessu, ita etiam in defectu; quod quidem contrariatur et virtuti quæ est in medio, et vitio quod est in excessu. Sed idem vitium ad defectum pertinens opponitur et crudelitati, et sævitia, videlicet remissio, vel dissolutio: dicit enim Gregorius, XX Moral., c. v, §14, col. 144, t. 2: « Sit amor sed non emolliens; sit vigor, sed non exasperans; sit zelus, sed non immoderate sæviens; sit pietas, sed non plus quam expediat parcens. » Ergo sævitia est idem crudelitati.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.sc] Seneca says (De Clementia ii, 4) that "a man who is angry without being hurt, or with one who has not offended him, is not said to be cruel, but to be brutal or savage."
[II-II.q.159.a.2.sc] Sed contra est quod Seneca dicit in II De clementia, cap. iv, circa med., quod « ille qui non est læsus, nec peccatori irascitur, non dicitur crudelis, sed ferus, sive sævus. »
[II-II.q.159.a.2.co] "Savagery" and "brutality" take their names from a likeness to wild beasts which are also described as savage. For animals of this kind attack man that they may feed on his body, and not for some motive of justice the consideration of which belongs to reason alone. Wherefore, properly speaking, brutality or savagery applies to those who in inflicting punishment have not in view a default of the person punished, but merely the pleasure they derive from a man's torture. Consequently it is evident that it is comprised under bestiality: for such like pleasure is not human but bestial, and resulting as it does either from evil custom, or from a corrupt nature, as do other bestial emotions. On the other hand, cruelty not only regards the default of the person punished, but exceeds in the mode of punishing: wherefore cruelty differs from savagery or brutality, as human wickedness differs from bestiality, as stated in Ethic. vii, 5.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.co] Respondeo dicendum, quod nomen sævitia et feritatis a similitudine ferarum accipitur, quæ etiam dicuntur sævæ. Hujusmodi enim animalia nocent hominibus ut ex eorum corporibus pascantur, non ex aliqua justitiae causa, cujus consideratio pertinet ad solam rationem. Et ideo, proprie loquendo, feritas vel sævitia dicitur, secundum quam aliquis in pœnis inferendis non considerat aliquam culpam ejus qui punitur, sed solum hoc quod delectatur in hominum cruciatu. Et sic patet quod continetur sub bestialitate: nam talis delectatio non est humana, sed bestialis, proveniens vel ex mala consuetudine, vel ex corruptione naturæ, sicut et aliæ hujusmodi bestiales affectiones. Sed crudelitas non solum attendit culpam in eo qui punitur, sed excedit modum in puniendo: et ideo crudelitas differt a sævitia sive feritate, sicut malitia humana differt a bestialitate, ut dicitur in VII Ethic., cap. v.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.1] Clemency is a human virtue; wherefore directly opposed to it is cruelty which is a form of human wickedness. But savagery or brutality is comprised under bestiality, wherefore it is directly opposed not to clemency, but to a more excellent virtue, which the Philosopher (Ethic. vii, 5) calls "heroic" or "god-like," which according to us, would seem to pertain to the gifts of the Holy Ghost. Consequently we may say that savagery is directly opposed to the gift of piety.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.1] Ad primum ergo dicendum, quod elementia est virtus humana: unde directe ipsi opponitur crudelitas, quæ est malitia humana. Sed sævitia vel feritas continetur sub bestialitate: unde non directe opponitur clementiæ, sed superexcellentiori virtuti, quam Philosophus, lib. VII Ethic., circa princ., vocat heroicam, vel divinam, quæ secundum nos videtur pertinere ad dona Spiritus sancti. Unde potest dici quod sævitia directe opponitur dono pietatis.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.2] A severe man is not said to be simply savage, because this implies a vice; but he is said to be "savage as regards the truth," on account of some likeness to savagery which is not inclined to mitigate punishment.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.2] Ad secundum dicendum, quod severus non dicitur simpliciter sævus, quia hoc sonat in vitium; sed dicitur sævus circa veritatem propter aliquam similitudinem sævitiæ, quæ non est diminutiva pœnarum.
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.3] Remission of punishment is not a vice, except it disregard the order of justice, which requires a man to be punished on account of his offense, and which cruelty exceeds. On the other hand, cruelty disregards this order altogether. Wherefore remission of punishment is opposed to cruelty, but not to savagery.
The Summa Theologica of St. Thomas AquinasSecond and Revised Edition, 1920Literally translated by Fathers of the English Dominican ProvinceOnline Edition Copyright © 2009 by Kevin Knight Nihil Obstat. F. Innocentius Apap, O.P., S.T.M., Censor. Theol.Imprimatur. Edus. Canonicus Surmont, Vicarius Generalis. Westmonasterii.APPROBATIO ORDINISNihil Obstat. F. Raphael Moss, O.P., S.T.L. and F. Leo Moore, O.P., S.T.L.Imprimatur. F. Beda Jarrett, O.P., S.T.L., A.M., Prior Provincialis AngliæMARIÆ IMMACULATÆ - SEDI SAPIENTIÆ
[II-II.q.159.a.2.ad.3] Ad tertium dicendum, quod remissio in puniendo non est vitium, nisi in quantum prætermittitur ordo justitiæ, quo aliquis deberet puniri propter culpam, quam excedit crudelitas. Sævitia autem penitus hunc ordinem non attendit. Unde remissio punitionis directe opponitur crudelitati, non autem sævitiæ.
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