01437cam a2200157 450050000500170000004100080001704200070002510000280003224501110006026000180017150000070018952008280019678601040102485601300112899900210125820260222002106.0 afre adc10aGuerbet, Marineeauthor00aThomas Aquinas: the Persistence of the Human Person’s Identity in the Resurrection and What Is At Stake. c2026.  a92 aThis study looks at a tension apparent in Thomistic anthropology: if the soul constitutes a person’s unique substantial form, why does Thomas Aquinas insist on the necessity of recovering the same corporal matter at the resurrection? Chronological analysis of the texts (1256-1265) refutes the evolutionist theses and shows Thomas as constant in his doctrine. Requiring material continuity does not compromise the coherence of an anthropology that maintains a strict articulation between revealed content and hylomorphism, and between the transcendence of revealed mystery and philosophical rigour, thus avoiding rationalism as well as concordism. This study clarifies a controversial point in medieval anthropology and holds a place in contemporary debates on individuation, substantial form and the unity of the person.0 nRevue des sciences philosophiques et théologiques | 109 | 4 | 2026-01-12 | p. 685-717 | 0035-220941uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-des-sciences-philosophiques-et-theologiques-2025-4-page-685?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080 c1665063d1665063