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Dr. Ryan Brady
Dr. Ryan Brady

An upcoming book by Dr. Ryan Brady, a member of 91黑料鈥檚 teaching faculty on the California campus, addresses a detailed but crucial question in moral theology: 鈥淚s the practical wisdom of the prudent man founded upon some kind of innate or acquired instinct, or does it presuppose understanding of intellectually grasped basic principles?鈥 , published by Emmaus Academic Press, guides readers through St. Thomas Aquinas鈥檚 teachings on reason, will, conscience, virtue, and the natural law to answer this decisive question.

鈥淢y interest in this subject began when I realized that many scholars were discussing virtue in very subjective ways that seemed to bracket it off from the influence of natural law,鈥 says Dr. Brady. 鈥淭hese notions, it seemed to me, would make reason feckless when it comes to morality and reduce the life of virtue to a pursuit of a kind of nebulous conception of the 鈥榞ood鈥 that would be unmoored from first principles.鈥

Fascination with this fundamental question sustained Dr. Brady through his subsequent labors, which were considerable. 鈥淚 worked on the manuscript for a year straight, though it is the culmination of about eight years of serious thought,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven after completing the initial draft, though, I spent about two years working closely with the publisher. They asked me to translate what amounted to about 60 pages of mostly Latin footnotes derived largely from St. Thomas and his commentators.鈥 With those years of toil behind him, Dr. Brady is overjoyed to see the fruits of his scholarship in print.

Advance response to the book has been overwhelmingly positive. As an exercise in systematic theology, Conforming to Right Reason is 鈥渁n extremely impressive work,鈥 according to Rev. Kevin L. Flannery, S.J.; 鈥淚n an exhaustive and precise manner, [it] examines areas of Thomas Aquinas鈥檚 thought that are of fundamental importance for contemporary ethics and moral theology.鈥 Moreover, Dr. Brady鈥檚 meticulous translations have garnered widespread attention: 鈥淎s a professional translator of Thomistic works from the Latin, his fluency in Aquinas鈥檚 language and thought is simply outstanding,鈥 says Dr. David Elliot of The Catholic University of America.

鈥淚n the end, I am quite pleased with the result,鈥 reflects Dr. Brady. 鈥淚 hope the two extra years I spent working on it in my spare time will make the book more widely accessible to anyone interested in the relationship between the will and reason, the true nature of freedom, and the centrality of intellectually informed virtue for attaining happiness and union with God.鈥