La crítica de Marsilio de Padua a la doctrina de la "Plenitudo Potestatis"del Papa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/endoxa.21.2006.5167Keywords:
Marsilio de Padua, jurisdicción, Papado, poder, supremacía,Abstract
Para Marsilio de Padua la causa de la guerra civil que desgarraba Italia a principios del siglo XIV es la doctrina pontificia de la plenitudo potestatis, que se propone destruir con su obra. El artículo analiza los principales fundamentos y momentos de la construcción de esa doctrina a lo largo de la Edad Media y expone la crítica de Marsilio. La conclusión es que no existe base espiritual para un poder temporal distinto del poder político del legislador humano. Por tanto, el único poder supremo o plenitudo potestatis no pertenece al Papa en virtud de su sacerdocio ni de su primado, que es de origen humano y no divino.Downloads
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Published
2006-01-01
How to Cite
Bayona Aznar, B. (2006). La crítica de Marsilio de Padua a la doctrina de la "Plenitudo Potestatis"del Papa. ENDOXA, 1(21), 217–239. https://doi.org/10.5944/endoxa.21.2006.5167
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