- Ludwig Babenstuber
Ludwig Babenstuber (1660–
5 April 1726 ) was a Germanphilosopher andtheologian and vice-chancellor of theUniversity of Salzburg .He was born in 1660 at
Teining inBavaria . Having completed his early studies he entered the novitiate of theOrder of St. Benedict atEttal Abbey in 1681, made his religious profession in 1682, and thereafter devoted the greater part of his life to teaching.At the commencement of his studies he had given no promise of brilliancy, but by his untiring application and industry he shortly acquired so vast a store of knowledge, that he soon came to be regarded as one of the most learned men of his day -- "vir comsummatae in omni genere dictrinae et probitatis", as he is styled in
Dom Egger 's "Idea ordinis Hierarchico-Benedictini", and in the "History of the University of Salzburg". Until 1690 Babenstuber was Director of the scholasticate of his order atSalzburg , taughtphilosophy there from 1690 to 1693, then went to theAugustinian Schlehdorf Abbey to teachtheology in the monastery of theCanons Regular .Returning to Salzburg in 1695, he took up successively the professorships of moral theology, dogmatic theology, and exegesis, in the celebrated Benedictine university of that city. He remained at Salzburg for twenty-two years, during which period he held the office of vice-rector for three years, and that of vice-chancellor of the university for six. In 1717 he returned to his monastery at Ettal, where he spent the remainder of his days.
In dogmatic theology Babenstuber was a pronounced
Thomist ; in moral, a vigorous defender ofprobabilism . He maintained, among other things, that a single author, if he were "beyond contradiction" (omni exceptione major), could, of his own authority, render an opinion probably, even against general opinion. In matters of faith, however, he rejected the principle of probabilism absolutely. In one of his disquisitions he had also stated that it was allowable to celebrate Mass privately on Maundy Thursday and Holy Saturday, but before his "Ethica Supernaturalis" had issued from the press, he learned that the Roman tribunals forbade it, and so he promptly corrected that assertion. Babenstuber's published works include a wide range of subjects, mainly philosophical and theological. The most important are "Philosophia Thomistica" (4 vols., Salzburg, 1704) and "Ethica Supernaturalis" (Augsburg, 1718).He died on
5 April 1726 at the Benedictine monastery of Ettal.
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