How friendly were St. Thomas and Erasmus?
According to the CE:
"The money for a trip to
England he earned by acting as tutor to three Englishmen, from whom he also obtained valuable letters of introduction. During his stay in
England (1498-99), he made the acquaintance at Oxford of Colet,
Thomas More, Latimer, and others, with all of whom acquaintance ripened into lifelong friendship."
https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05510b.htm And the article on St. Thomas More says, "In 1497 More was introduced to
Erasmus, probably at the house of Lord Mountjoy, the great scholar's pupil and patron. The friendship at once became intimate, and later on
Erasmus paid several long visits at More's Chelsea house, and the two friends corresponded regularly until death separated them." (Citation below)
The same article hints at an apparent opposition between the humanism of Erasmus and scholasticism:
"Like his teacher Lorenzo Valla, he regarded
Scholasticism as the greatest perversion of the religious spirit; according to him this degeneration dated from the primitive
Christological controversies, which caused the
Church to lose its evangelical simplicity and become the victim of hair-splitting philosophy, which culminated in
Scholasticism."
Therefore, there is a move away from scholaticism, at least among st the humanism of Erasmus, shared by the Protestants who arose at the same time, and shared this desire to shed religion of scholasticism, and recover the early simplicity of scripture and the Fathers. And it survived anr reemerged at Vatican II.
I don't recall reading anything of St. Thomas rejecting scholasticism, however. But Utopia is supposed to be his most humanistic work (I've not yet read it), so perhaps he addresses the matter there?
Here's the CE article on St. Thomas More:
https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14689c.htm