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Paul Vincent Spade

Indiana University, Bloomington
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    96
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    79

 More details
  • Indiana University, Bloomington
    Department of Philosophy
    Unknown
University of Toronto, St. George Campus
Graduate Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1972
Bloomington, Indiana, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (96)
  •  130
    What is a proof for the existence of God?
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (4). 1975.
    Arguments for Theism, Misc
  •  73
    John Buridan on the Liar: a study and reconstruction
    Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 19 (4): 579-590. 1978.
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicJean BuridanLiar Paradox
  •  199
    Ockham's distinctions between absolute and connotative terms
    Vivarium 13 (1): 55-76. 1975.
    Medieval LogicMedieval Philosophy of Language
  • V. FERRER "Tractatus de suppositionibus" (review)
    History and Philosophy of Logic 2 (n/a): 137. 1981.
  •  57
    Le Antinomie Semantiche Nella Logica Medievale. By Francesco Bottin. Padova: Editrice Antenore. 1976. Pp. 222. L. 6,000
    Dialogue 17 (2): 384-390. 1978.
  •  129
    The problem of universals and wyclif's alleged "ultrarealism"
    Vivarium 43 (1): 111-123. 2005.
    John Wyclif has been described as "ultrarealist" in his theory of universals. This paper attempts a preliminary assessment of that judgment and argues that, pending further study, we have no reason to accept it. It is certainly true that Wyclif is extremely vocal and insistent about his realism, but it is not obvious that the actual content of his view is especially extreme. The paper distinguishes two common medieval notions of a universal, the Aristotelian/Porphyrian one in terms of predicatio…Read more
    John Wyclif has been described as "ultrarealist" in his theory of universals. This paper attempts a preliminary assessment of that judgment and argues that, pending further study, we have no reason to accept it. It is certainly true that Wyclif is extremely vocal and insistent about his realism, but it is not obvious that the actual content of his view is especially extreme. The paper distinguishes two common medieval notions of a universal, the Aristotelian/Porphyrian one in terms of predication and the Boethian one in terms of being metaphysically common to many. On neither approach does Wyclif 's theory of universals postulate new and non-standard entities besides those recognized by more usual versions of realism. Again pending further study, neither do Wyclif 's views appear to assign philosophically extreme or novel roles to the entities he does recognize as universal. On the contrary, by at least one measure, his theory of universals is less extreme than Walter Burley's, as Wyclif himself observes. For Wyclif, the universal is numerically identical with its singulars, but numerical identity is governed by something weaker than the Indiscernibility of identicals.
    UniversalsMedieval Philosophy of Language
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