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Medieval Theories of Conscience

02 dec 2022 14:00 - 17:00
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Sorbonne Université
Salle D052
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Seminar organized by Emily Corran, UCL, and 2022-2023 Paris IAS Fellow, as part of her seminar series "Conscience and the Sources of Moral Authority".

Those who wish to attend the seminar remotely are welcome to do so. Please contact Christophe Grellard (christophe.grellard@ephe.psl.eu) or Emily Corran (emily.corran@ucl.ac.uk) in order to receive the Teams link.

With the participation of :

Dr Gustav Zamore (Cambridge)
‘Conscience, Synderesis, and Heresy – the Emergence of a New Subjectivity?’

In this paper, I will trace the scholastic discussions on conscience, synderesis, and heresy: the problems posed by an erring conscience, and how scholastic discussions informed and were formed by inquisitorial practice and wider clerical concerns about heresy. Based on inquisitorial registers from the early fourteenth century, I suggest that together with the pastoral revolution of the thirteenth century, following Lateran IV, these new theories and practices shaped the expectations on how the laity conceived of their interior lives.
Responder: Monica Brinzei.

Dr Stephen Mossman (Manchester)
‘Confession, anticlericalism, and bescheidenheit: the authority of conscience in the works of Rulman Merswin (1307-82)'

The considerable oeuvre of the Strasbourg writer Rulman Merswin, a sometime merchant banker turned contemplative, expresses a strong claim for laity to shape the direction of their own spiritual lives. That claim goes hand-in-hand with a marked anticlericalism systematically downplayed in earlier scholarship. His treatment of confession brings the matter into sharp relief. Laity are instructed to rely on their inner sense of discernment (bescheidenheit) to choose the right course in moral quandaries, in direct and explicit opposition to the spiritual direction and moral tutelage offered by ordained confessors. Bescheidenheit operates in Merswin’s anthropology as a grounding principle with the force of conscience. Responsibility for salvation is transferred wholly onto the shoulders of laity themselves. The spiritual merits of those laity who have reached a state of perfection in the contemplative life – the ‘friends of God’ – and not the prayers of the institutional church are the foundations on which the redemption of mankind rests. This paper will explore these linked issues of confession and conscience in relation to changing understandings of the self in the later Middle Ages.
Responder: Isabel Irribaren

Those who wish to attend the seminar remotely are welcome to do so. Please contact Christophe Grellard (christophe.grellard@ephe.psl.eu) or Emily Corran (emily.corran@ucl.ac.uk) in order to receive the Teams link.

Casuistry, the Laity and Ecclesiastical Hierarchy in the Late Middle Ages: Rule-based ethics in complex institutions
01 September 2022 - 30 June 2023
27850
02 Dec 2022 17:00
Emily Corran
No
28312
Seminars and Summerschools
Paris