- Ignacio Ellacuría
Infobox_Philosopher
region =
era =20th-century philosophy
color = #B0C4DE
image_caption = Ignacio Ellacuría
name = Ignacio Ellacuría
birth =November 09 ,1930
flagicon|SpainPortugalete ,Spain
death = death date and age|1989|11|16|1930|11|09
flagicon|El_SalvadorSan Salvador ,El Salvador
school_tradition =
main_interests =
influences = Xavier Zubiri
influenced =
notable_ideas = "proseguir"|Ignacio Ellacuría, S.J. (
Portugalete ,Biscay ,Spain ,November 9 ,1930 –San Salvador ,November 16 ,1989 ) was aRoman Catholic Jesuit priest ,philosopher , and theologian who did important work as aprofessor andrector at theUniversidad Centroamericana "José Simeón Cañas" (UCA), aJesuit university inEl Salvador founded in 1965. Ignacio Ellacuría was a close friend and colleague of the scholarsIgnacio Martín-Baró andSegundo Montes , all of whom were assassinated with Ellacuría by the Salvadoran army, along with three colleagues and two employees. His work was defining for the shape UCA took in its first years of existence and the years to come. Ellacuría was also responsible for the development of formation programs for priests in the Jesuit Central American province. Ellacuría's academic work was an important contribution to "Liberation Philosophy ". This school ofphilosophy stems from the work ofAugusto Salazar Bondy (1925-1974) andLeopoldo Zea (1912-2004). It focuses on liberating theoppressed in order "to reach the fullness of humanity". Ellacuría was also a strong supporter and contributor toLiberation Theology .The
political implications of Ellacuría's commitment to his ideas met strong opposition from the conservativereligious and political forces in El Salvador. This opposition led to Ellacuría’s murder by theSalvadoran army in 1989 at his residence in UCA along with five other fellow Jesuit priests and two employees. Their murder marked a turning point in theSalvadoran civil war (seeHistory of El Salvador ). On the one hand it increased international pressures on the Salvadoran government to signpeace agreement s with the guerrillaorganisation FMLN . On the other, it helped make Ellacuría's ideas (up until then only known inLatin America andSpain ) get to be known worldwide.There are at least five different schools within Latin American liberation philosophy. Ellacuría's thought represents the fifth school. (For an account of the first four schools see Horacio Cerutti’s "La Filosofía de la Liberación Latinoamericana," Mexico City: FCE, 1992).
Ellacuría joined the
Jesuits in 1947 and was commissioned to theCentral America nrepublic ofEl Salvador in 1948. He lived and worked there until his death in 1989, except for occasional periods, which he spent studying inEcuador ,Austria andSpain .Philosophy
Ellacuría's philosophy takes as a starting point
Xavier Zubiri 's (1898-1983) critique of Western philosophy. For Zubiri, ever sinceParmenides , Western thought separated sensing from intelligence. This error led to two results. The first one was what Zubiri called “thelogification of intelligence ” and the second one was what he called “theentification of reality ”.The “logification of intelligence” implied that intellect was reduced to
logos . This view led philosophers to believe that what they called "Being " was the cause ofreality , and this in turn, explained the confusion ofmetaphysics withontology .Logification of intelligence excludes sensual, not so logical, functions of intelligence. Although Zubiri recognized descriptive logos and
reason as important components ofintelligence , he pointed out that intelligence did not reduce itself to them. For Zubiri intelligence was a unity with the modalities of sensual apprehension, logos and reason.The logification of intelligence led to the perception of reality as "Being" in a zone in space and time (as in
Heidegger 'sDasein ) of identifiableentities with anessence , outside thehuman brain . This is what Zubiri called the “entification of reality”. This perception sees reality as a particular form of "Being". Thereby, for Zubiri, "Being" had been "substantivised" byWestern philosophy .For Zubiri, reality is paramount to Being, which is not a
noun , but averb . Being is a particular aspect of reality and not the other way around. Metaphysics studies reality and ontology studies being.Human beings ' way of accessing reality is intelligence, not a logified one, but a "sentient intelligence" that is itself a part of reality.The senses,
logic ,reason , intuition andimagination are one and the same faculty, because each of these things determine one another. This faculty differences human beings from otherspecies and has been achieved throughevolution . Having asentient intelligence implies having a conscience and the possibility to imagine new realities. Sentient intelligence has the ability to recognise the processual and structural character of reality. Therefore human beings are able to influence it, and create andtranscend the historical boundaries that have been reached.For Zubiri there is no need for a realist/
anti-realist discussion on if there is or not a reality that is external and independent to human beings, or if reality is a bulk of internal illusions to human beings. It is both, but not in the sensecritical realism pretends (where human beings are seen as a reality that can be separated from an objective outer reality). For Zubiri, human beings are imbedded in reality and cannot exist without it. They needair ,food ,water and otherbeings . The "outer" and objective world must also come inside human beings for them to continue existing. Sentient intelligence should be able to make sense of this existence in a way that allows human beings to realise their capabilities in the world.In this line of thinking, Ellacuría said human reality is unavoidably personal,
social andhistorical . Biology and society are elements of history, which means that they are always in movement. But this should not be confused withhistorical materialism that says human beings are passive instruments of the forces of history. Human beings certainly inherit constrains constructed in the past but they always have the possibility to transcend them because of their sentient intelligence. Praxis is the name Ellacuría gives to reflected human action aimed at changing reality. Unlike other animals that can only respond mechanically to stimuli from outside, through sentient intelligence and praxis, human beings have to "realise" their existence. Individuals indialectic interaction with society, have to make out what sort ofEgo to have by using their sentient intelligence and this implies transcending inherited constrains.This means that progress in reality happens through a combination of physical, biological and "praxical" factors. Through praxis, human beings are able to realise a wider range of possibilities for action. In other words, one praxis can lead to a fuller praxis. When this is so, praxis can be said to gradually increase liberty, if liberty is defined as greater possibilities for action.
According to Ellacuría, the existence of people that are marginalized from
society implies thathistory and practice have not delivered a wider range of possibilities for realisation for every human being in the world. This situation has prevented these excluded people to realise their existence as human beings. Therefore, it is a situation that stands away from the fullness of humanity and the fullness of reality. But this situation can be changed.According to Ellacuría, before the advent of humanity, the unfolding of reality took place only by physical and biological forces. But in our era, forces exclusive to human beings (praxis) can also help unfold reality. Since human beings have the possibility to reflect, it is philosophy’s duty to exercise this ability to reflect in order to change reality and allow greater possibilities for individual realisation.
This way of thinking finds its parallels in the 1990s in
Martha Nussbaum 's definition of human development as the increase in human capabilities for action (see Martha C. Nussbaum, Women and Human Development, Cambridge University Press, 2000) andAmartya Sen 's notion of development as freedom (see Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom, Oxford University Press, 1999).Theology
As many other
theologians of hisgeneration , Ellacuría intended to construct a newtheology , which he called aHistorical Theology . His view ofhistory followed theHegelian dialectic tradition that culminated inMarx 'shistorical materialism . However, Ellacuría rejected Marx's view of human beings as objects of their material conditions. He stressed the importance ofconscience , human praxis and its possibilities for influencing the course of history and thereby material conditions themselves. He has been unfairly accused of trying to contaminatetheology withMarxism , but the methodological similarities of his thought with Marxism stem from a common Hegelian view of history as progress brought about by overcoming contradictions.By
Historical Theology Ellacuría meant a way of making theology: to reflect aboutfaith from thehistorical present and to reflect about the historical present from faith. According to him, all theology is conditioned by its historical present. Historical theology intends to acquireconscience about its historical context and to incorporate it fully. The concept oflocus theologicus (theologogical place) is very important in this theology.Rudolf Bultmann developedexistencial biblical hermeneutics , or the idea that each individual can only read and understand the bible from his or her personal existential condition and the biblical text acquires life only if it can awaken an experience of faith in the reader. This generates ahermeneutic alcircle since the reader understands theBible from his historical present and the historical present from the Bible. Ellacuría placed himself in this hermeneutic tradition and he gave a step further. For Ellacuría, the reader is not just an individual but acommunity , just like the people ofIsrael in theOld Testament . This means thatcommunity faith comes first and thenindividual faith .According to Ellacuría, the value of the Old Testament is not reduced with the
New Testament . The New Testament makes the community character of faith from the Old Testament something radical and universal. It makes it radical because it establishes that the alliance of God with people is much more than a simple code of laws and lithurgical rituals: it is an invitation to justice and charity, not as exceptional practices but as a stable structure. That is why this alliance is established in a law. It makes the faith universal because the New Testament is communicated to every human being, independently of race, culture, sex, religion or social condition.Liberation Theology is then a new way of doingHistorical Theology in a particularlocus theologicus : the historical present of Latin America, where a large portion of the population is oppressed by structures that deny them the possibilities to satisfy their needs and to develop. It arises from the spirit ofGaudium et Spes of theSecond Vatican Council and thesocial encyclical s ofPope John XXIII , and more specifically, theEpiscopal Conference s ofMedellín in 1968 andPuebla in 1978. Such a reflection on the Bible is supported on the historical present of a collectivity that desires liberation from oppression. There is a long biblical tradition about liberation that starts with the book ofExodus .According to Ellacuría,
salvation is accomplishedhistorically , not just individually but collectively. It is not just about liberation fromevil ,guilt , personal or social offenses,pain ,disease andfetichism . Those forms of liberation only start by liberation from unjust structures likeslavery ,political domination ,psychological andsocial oppression . Besides the book of Exodus, the Bible also presents other such cases of liberation from oppression as the return fromexile inBabylon in the books ofEsdras andNehemiah ; the fight againstMacedon ian occupation in the book ofMaccabees ; theBeatitude s ofJesus and the book ofApocalypse in the face of the persecution ofChristians inRome .Other forms of doing
historical theology would be for exampleFeminist Theology ;African-American Theology as developed byMartin Luther King in the fight forcivil rights in theUnited States ;African Liberation Theology , that has mostly been applied toSouth Africa in the fight againstapartheid ; andIndigenous Theology that stems fromBartolomé de las Casas and other misionaries in the first Spanishcolonies in theAmericas in theXVI century .Union of science and theology
Ellacuría was aware of the challenges implied in relating
theology withscience . However he managed to articulate a relationship between the two in his vision of auniversity that served the purpose of liberating the oppressed.According to Ellacuría, there are two aspects to every university. The most evident one is that it deals with culture; or in other words knowledge and the use of the intellect. The second, and not so evident, is that it must be concerned with the
social reality , precisely because a university is inescapably a social force: it must transform and enlighten the society in which it lives.Ellacuría believed that a university cannot always and in every place be the same. It must constantly look at its own peculiar
historical reality . TheThird World is characterized more by oppression than byliberty , more bypoverty than by abundance. According to Ellacuría, in such a context a university must do everything possible so that liberty overcomes oppression. He added that the university must carry out this general commitment with the means uniquely at its disposal. As an intellectual community the university must analyse causes; use imagination and creativity together to discover the remedies to problems; communicate a consciousness that inspires the freedom of self-determination; educate professionals with a conscience, who will be the immediate instruments of such a transformation; and constantly hone an educational institution that is both academically excellent and ethically oriented.Ellacuría thought that it is possible for reason and faith to merge in confronting the reality of the poor. Reason must open its eyes to their suffering; while faith sees in the weak of this world what salvation must mean and the conversion to which we are called.
Such a university must take into account the
preferential option for the poor . This does not mean that only the poor will study at the university; it does not mean that the university should abdicate its mission of academic excellence--excellence which is needed in order to solve complex social issues of our time. What it does mean is that the university should be present intellectually where it is needed: to provide science for those without science; to provide skills for those without skills; to be a voice for those without voices; to give intellectual support for those who do not possess the academic qualifications to make their rights legitimate.Chomsky on Ellacuría
References
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, "Veinte Años de Historia en El Salvador: Escritos Políticos" [VA] , three volumes, second edition, San Salvador: UCA Editores, 1993
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, "Escritos Universitarios" [EU] , San Salvador: UCA Editores, 1999.
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, Filosofía de la Realidad Histórica, San Salvador: UCA Editores, 1990.
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, Escritos Filosóficos [EF] , three volumes San Salvador: UCA Editores, 1996-2001.
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, Escritos Teológicos [ET] , four volumes, San Salvador: UCA Editores, 2000-2002
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Filosofía y Política” [1972] , VA-1, pp. 47-62
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Liberación: Misión y Carisma de la Iglesia” [1973] , ET-2, pp. 553-584
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Diez Años Después: ¿Es Posible una Universidad Distinta?” [1975] , EU, pp. 49-92
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Hacia una Fundamentación del Método Teológico Latinoamericana” [1975] , ET-1, pp. 187-218
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Filosofía, ¿Para Qué?” [1976] , EF-3, pp. 115-132
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Fundamentación Biológica de la Ética” [1979] , EF-3, pp, 251-269
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Universidad y Política” [1980] , VA-1, pp. 17-46
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “El Objeto de la Filosofía” [1981] , VA-1, pp. 63-92
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “Función Liberadora de la Filosofía” [1985] , VA-1, pp. 93-122
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “La Superación del Reduccionismo Idealista en Zubiri” [1988] , EF-3, pp. 403-430
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “El Desafío de las Mayorías Populares” (1989), EU, pp. 297-306 (an English translation is available in TSSP, pp. 171-176)
*Ellacuría, Ignacio, “En Torno al Concepto y a la Idea de Liberación” [1989] , ET-1, pp. 629-657
*Ellacuría, ignacio, “Utopía y Profetismo en América Latina” [1989] , ET-2, pp. 233-294 (an English translation is available in TSSP, pp. 44-88).
*Teresa Whitfield, Paying the Price: Ignacio Ellacuría and the Murdered Jesuits of El Salvador, (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1995).
*Héctor Samour, Voluntad de Liberación: El Pensamiento Filosófico de Ignacio Ellacuría, San Salvador: UCA Editores, 2002
*Horacio Cerutti, La Filosofia de la Liberación Latinoamericana, Mexico City: FCE, 1992
*Kevin Burke, The Ground Beneath the Cross: The Theology of Ignacio Ellacuría, Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2000
*John Hassett and Hugh Lacey, (eds.), Towards a Society that Serves Its People: The Intellectual Contribution of El Salvador’s Murdered Jesuits [TSSP] ,Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1991.
External links
* http://www.uca.edu.sv/martires/new/
* http://www.fespinal.com/espinal/llib/en86.rtf
* http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/ellacuri.htm
* http://www.bc.edu/offices/ahana/about/history/ellacuria/
* http://ensayo.rom.uga.edu/filosofos/spain/ellacuria/
* http://www.rtfcam.org/martyrs/UCA/ellacuria.htm
* http://www.scu.edu/Jesuits/ellacuria.html
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