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129The 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
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1041 There have been several editions of Fridugisus’ letter. I have consulted those in Jaques-Paul Migne, Patrologiae cursus completus … series latina, 221 vols., (Paris: J.-P. Migne, 1844–1864), vol. 105, cols. 751–756; Francesco Corvino, “Il ‘De nihilo et tenebris’ di Fredegiso di Tours,” Rivista critica di storia della filosofia (1956), pp. 273–286; and the most recent and authoritative edition, in Concettina Gennaro, Fridugiso di Tours e il “De substantia nihili et tenebrarum”: Edizione critica…Read more
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77The Cambridge Companion to Ockham (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 1999.The Franciscan William of Ockham was an English medieval philosopher, theologian, and political theorist. Along with Thomas Aquinas and Duns Scotus, he is regarded as one of the three main figures in medieval philosophy after around 1150. Ockham is important not only in the history of philosophy and theology, but also in the development of early modern science and of modern notions of property rights and church-state relations. This volume offers a full discussion of all significant aspects of O…Read more
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80divinity in reference to substance or in some other way; and I judge that a path of inquiry should be taken from that place which is agreed to be the clear starting point of all affairs, that is from the very foundations of the catholic faith. So, if I should ask whether He who is called Father is a substance, the response would be that He is a substance. But if I should ask whether the Son is a substance, the response would be the same. And no one..
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1Peter of Ailly : Concepts and Insolubles. An Annotated TranslationTijdschrift Voor Filosofie 44 (4): 730-730. 1982.
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143What I want to talk about here is a puzzle for historians of philosophy who, like me, have spent a fair amount of time studying the history of mediaeval logic and semantic theory. I don’t know how to solve it, but in various forms it has come up repeatedly in my own work and in the work of colleagues I have talked with about it. I would like to share it with you now.
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The Mediaeval Liar: A Study of John Buridan's Position on the Paradox, with a Catalogue of the "Insolubilia"--Literature of the Middle AgesDissertation, University of Toronto (Canada). 1972.
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94I am preparing an English translation of both the Tractatus longior and the Tractatus brevior of Walter Burley’s De puritate artis logicae for the “Yale Library of Medieval Philosophy.” My translation is based of course on the 1955 critical edition by Philotheus Boehner, the only reasonably reliable text available. Nevertheless, in preparing my translation, I have had several occasions to question or correct readings in Boehner’s edition. In some instances the corrections are merely obvious typo…Read more
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84Robert Fland's Insolubilia: An edition, with comments on the dating of Fland's worksMediaeval Studies 40 (1): 56-80. 1978.
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86From Guillelmi de Ockham, Summa logicae, Philotheus Boehner, Gedeon Gál and Stephanus Brown, ed., (“Guillelmi de Ockham Opera philosophica et theologica,” OPh I; St. Bonaventure, N.Y.: The Franciscan Institute, 1974), pp. 744–.
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113"Averroes' Middle Commentaries on Aristotle's Categories and De Interpretation", translated by Charles E. ButterworthJournal of the History of Philosophy 24 (1): 117. 1986.
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69Ockham's Nominalist Metaphysics: Some Main ThemesIn The Cambridge Companion to Ockham, Cambridge University Press. 1999.
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164Walter Burley, from the Beginning of his Treatise on the Kinds of Suppositon (De suppositionibus)Topoi 16 (1): 95-102. 1997.(1) (p. 31) (1.1) “Some things that are said are said with complexity, and others are said without complexity.”3 Those that are said without complexity are, for example, ‘man’, ‘animal’. Those that are said with complexity are, for example, ‘A man runs’, ‘An animal runs’.4 (2) It is plain from this that the incomplex is part of the complex.
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63On a conservative attitude toward some naive semantic principlesNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 16 (4): 597-602. 1975.
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38Lies, language, and logic in the late Middle Ages (edited book)Variorum Reprints. 1988.'This sentence is false' - is that true? The 'Liar paradox' embodied in those words exerted a particular fascination on the logicians of the Western later Middle Ages, and, along with similar 'insoluble' problems, forms the subject of the first group of articles in this volume. In the following parts Professor Spade turns to medieval semantic theory, views on the relationship between language and thought, and to a study of one particular genre of disputation, that known as 'obligationes'. The fo…Read more
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78The manuscript Venice, Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, Class XI n. 12, Zanetti Latini 301 (= 1576), contains on fols. 1r–24v a seemingly unique copy of a series of fifteen logical questions, ten on obligationes and the remaining five on insolubilia.1 The series on obligationes is untitled and unattributed in the manuscript, but the questions on insolubilia begin (fol. 18r11) “Incipiunt quaestiones super insolubilibus,” and are attributed at the end to a certain John of Wesel (fol. 24v41): “Ergo e…Read more
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Roger Swyneshed's Obligationes. Edition and commentsArchives d'Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 44. 1977.
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206Apart from his Consolation of Philosophy, perhaps the most well known text of Boethius is his discussion of universals in the Second Commentary on Porphyry’s Isagoge.1 In that passage, he first reviews the arguments for and against the existence of universal entities, and then offers a theory he attributes to Alexander of Aphrodisias, a kind of theory called in recent times “moderate realism,” according to which there are no universal entities in the ontology of the world, but nevertheless there…Read more
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Richard Brinkley's "De Insolubilibus": a Preliminary AssessmentRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 46 (2): 245. 1991.
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Areas of Specialization
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |