Central Problem

Augustine confronts the fundamental question of human existence: how can human beings, caught between their restless searching and their need for stable truth, find their way to God and to genuine self-understanding? Unlike Greek philosophy, which began with the cosmos, Augustine begins with the human soul—the “inner person” (homo interior)—in its singular, unrepeatable relation to God.

The driving questions emerge from Augustine’s own spiritual journey: Why does the soul remain restless? How can we attain certainty against the Skeptics’ doubts? What is the relationship between faith and reason? If God is good and omnipotent, whence comes evil? How can human freedom be reconciled with divine grace? What is the nature of time, that most familiar yet mysterious of realities?

These questions are not abstract puzzles but existential urgencies: “I myself had become for myself a great problem” (Factus eram ipse mihi magna quaestio). Augustine’s philosophy emerges from confession—the simultaneous acknowledgment of one’s sins and of God as God—turning inward to find truth that transcends the self.

Main Thesis

The Unity of Faith and Reason: Augustine articulates the famous formulas crede ut intelligas (“believe in order to understand”) and intellige ut credas (“understand in order to believe”). Faith and reason are complementary dimensions of the single human relation to God. Faith without understanding is blind acceptance; understanding without faith lacks the illumination needed to grasp divine truth.

The Theory of Illumination: Against skepticism, Augustine argues that certain knowledge is possible. Even the skeptic who doubts must exist to doubt: si fallor, sum (“if I am deceived, I am”). Yet human reason, being mutable and imperfect, cannot itself be the source of immutable truths (mathematical, logical, ethical principles). These derive from God, who illuminates the mind as the sun illuminates the eye. The ideas are not in a separate Platonic realm but in the divine mind—the Logos—through which God creates.

Evil as Privation: Rejecting Manichean dualism, Augustine holds that evil has no substantial existence. Since God creates all that is, and all that is is good (being = good), evil can only be the privation or corruption of good—a deficiency, not a thing. Moral evil (malum culpae) arises from the will’s perverse turning away from God toward lesser goods; physical evil (malum poenae) is punishment for original sin.

Time as Distension of the Soul: Time cannot be measured as past (no longer), future (not yet), or present (an extensionless instant). Time exists only in the soul’s distensio—its stretching toward what it remembers (present of past), attends to (present of present), and expects (present of future).

Grace and Predestination: Against Pelagianism, Augustine insists that fallen humanity is a “mass of damnation” incapable of salvation without divine grace. The will is truly free only when liberated from sin by grace. Yet Augustine’s emphasis on predestination creates tensions with human responsibility that persist throughout Christian thought.

The Two Cities: History is the arena of struggle between two “cities”: the civitas Dei (city of God), animated by love of God even to contempt of self, and the civitas terrena (earthly city), animated by love of self even to contempt of God. These are not identical with Church and State but represent two orientations of the will, intermingled until the end of time.

Historical Context

Augustine (354-430 CE) lived through the twilight of the Roman Empire. Born in Tagaste (modern Algeria) to a pagan father and Christian mother (Monica), he received classical Latin education and pursued rhetoric. His spiritual journey led through Manicheanism, academic skepticism, and Neoplatonism before his conversion to Christianity in Milan (386), influenced by Bishop Ambrose and his reading of Plotinus.

The sack of Rome by Alaric’s Goths (410) provoked pagan accusations that Christianity had weakened the Empire. Augustine’s City of God (413-426) responds by developing a comprehensive theology of history. As Bishop of Hippo (395-430), Augustine combated Manicheanism, Donatism (which denied the validity of sacraments administered by unworthy priests), and Pelagianism (which denied original sin and the necessity of grace). He died in 430 as Vandals besieged Hippo.

Augustine’s thought synthesizes biblical revelation, Neoplatonic philosophy, and the previous Patristic tradition, transforming abstract theological concepts into elements of lived interiority. His emphasis on the will, consciousness, and subjective experience anticipates modern philosophy’s turn to the subject.

Philosophical Lineage

flowchart TD
    Plato --> Plotinus
    Plotinus --> Augustine
    Cicero --> Augustine
    Ambrose --> Augustine
    Paul --> Augustine
    Augustine --> Boethius
    Augustine --> Anselm
    Augustine --> Aquinas
    Augustine --> Luther
    Augustine --> Descartes

    class Plato,Plotinus,Augustine,Cicero,Ambrose,Paul,Boethius,Anselm,Aquinas,Luther,Descartes internal-link;

Key Thinkers

ThinkerDatesMovementMain WorkCore Concept
Augustine354-430 CEPatristicsConfessions, City of GodIllumination, evil as privation
Ambrosec. 340-397 CELatin PatristicsDe OfficiisMoral theology
Pelagiusc. 354-420 CEPelagianismLost worksHuman capacity for good
Boethiusc. 480-526 CELate AntiquityConsolation of PhilosophyEternity and providence
Pseudo-Dionysiusc. 5th-6th c. CEMystical TheologyDivine NamesNegative theology

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinitionRelated to
IlluminationDivine action enabling human knowledge of immutable truths; God illuminates the mind as sun illuminates eyesAugustine, Epistemology
Evil as privationEvil has no substantial existence but is deficiency or corruption of good; moral evil is will’s turning from GodAugustine, Theodicy
Distensio animiTime as “distension of the soul”—the mind’s extension through memory, attention, and expectationAugustine, Philosophy of Time
Original sinInherited guilt from Adam’s transgression; humanity as “mass of damnation” requiring graceAugustine, Paul
GraceUnmerited divine gift enabling salvation; liberates will from bondage to sinAugustine, Soteriology
PredestinationGod’s eternal decree determining who receives salvific grace; creates tension with free willAugustine, Calvinism
Two citiesCivitas Dei and civitas terrena—two communities defined by opposing loves (of God vs. of self)Augustine, Political Theology
ConfessionDual acknowledgment: of God as God (praise) and of one’s sins as sins (penitence)Augustine, Spiritual Practice
Inner personHomo interior—the soul in its truth and simplicity; locus of encounter with divine truthAugustine, Anthropology
TraducianistTheory that souls are transmitted from parents through generation, explaining transmission of original sinAugustine, Psychology

Authors Comparison

ThemePlotinusAugustinePelagius
Source of truthThe One, via intellectGod, via illuminationHuman reason
Nature of evilNon-being, matterPrivation of good, willBad example, habit
Human capacityReturn through philosophyRequires divine graceNatural virtue possible
Role of willSubordinate to intellectCentral, but woundedFree and capable
TimeEternity degradedDistension of soulLinear succession
SalvationPhilosophical ascentFaith + graceMoral effort
InfluenceShapes Augustine’s thoughtOrthodox ChristianityCondemned as heresy

Influences & Connections

Summary Formulas

  • Augustine on knowledge: In the inner person dwells truth; return to yourself—and if you find your nature mutable, transcend yourself toward the immutable God who illuminates the mind.
  • Augustine on evil: Evil is not a substance but privation of good; moral evil arises from the will’s perverse turning from God to creatures; physical evil is punishment for original sin.
  • Augustine on time: Time is distension of the soul—present memory of past, present attention to present, present expectation of future; only the soul’s abiding presence makes time’s flow intelligible.
  • Augustine on grace: The will is free only when liberated by grace from bondage to sin; without grace, humanity remains a “mass of damnation” incapable of meriting salvation.

Timeline

YearEvent
354 CEAugustine born in Tagaste, North Africa
372 CEAugustine reads Cicero’s Hortensius, turns to philosophy
374 CEAugustine joins the Manicheans
384 CEAugustine receives chair of rhetoric in Milan
386 CEConversion to Christianity; retreat to Cassiciacum
387 CEAugustine baptized by Ambrose; death of Monica
391 CEAugustine ordained priest in Tagaste
395 CEAugustine consecrated Bishop of Hippo
397-401 CEAugustine writes Confessions
410 CESack of Rome by Alaric’s Goths
411 CEBeginning of anti-Pelagian controversy
413-426 CEAugustine writes City of God
430 CEDeath of Augustine during Vandal siege of Hippo

Notable Quotes

“You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.” — Augustine

“If I am deceived, I am. For one who does not exist cannot be deceived.” — Augustine

“Do not go outside yourself; return into yourself. Truth dwells in the inner person.” — Augustine


NOTE

This summary has been created to present the key points from the source text, which was automatically extracted using LLM. Please note that the summary may contain errors. It serves as an essential starting point for study and reference purposes.