The anthropology of K. Wojtyla as a synthesis of classical thought and modernity
Abstract
Convinced that anthropology constitutes the nucleus of K. Wojtyla’s thought, the author attempts to discover what kind of anthropology is at the basis of Wojtyla’s philosophical writings. The analysis of the basic structures of Wojtyla’s anthropology leads the author to hold that Wojtyla’s philosophy can be considered a coherent personalism since the person who acts is not just the method (the conscience of the action), but also the object of study and, above all, the end, that is, to know and to make known to the person his special dignity. Regarding the contribution of Wojtyla’s anthropology, the author identifies two central themes: the relationship between person and act, and relationality. Regarding the former, Wojtyla effects a synthesis of metaphysics of being and phenomenology: the person is not relative to his acts, because he is a suppositum; nonetheless, the person is in close relationship to his acts. If it were not for these acts the person could not even know himself as subject and could not perfect himself as a person. Regarding the latter, Wojtyla sustains that the person is not person in the singular but in the plural, since each person is in relation with all the others, and this is shown from the phenomena of participation, solidarity, and, above all, donation. The author concludes by sustaining that the multiplicity and the original relationality of the person is one of the aspects of Wojtyla’s anthropology that would be worthy of further study.