Abstract
A clear, concise and well-organized textbook in Thomistic metaphysics which incorporates recent developments in "Thomistic Existentialism," while retaining the best of the traditional content. Each chapter concludes with a summary and a list of supplementary readings. As a textbook, it succeeds in stressing the essentials and, at the same time, by judicious use of footnotes, indicates what are still issues among Thomists. The book represents the position of that group of Neo-Thomist thinkers who emphasize the primacy of existence and the actual over essence and the possible as the object of metaphysics. A good introduction to the subject.--V. G. P.