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David Burrell

University of Notre Dame
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    128
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 More details
  • University of Notre Dame
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Yale University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1965
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Religion
Social and Political Philosophy
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
African/Africana Philosophy
Asian Philosophy
  • All publications (128)
  •  39
    Review of Muhammad Ali khAlidi (ed. And trans.), Medieval Islamic Philosophical Writings (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (1). 2006.
    Arabic and Islamic Philosophy
  •  48
    Being and Goodness (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 9 (4): 538-543. 1992.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  52
    La Trinité créatrice: Trinité et création dans les commentaires aux “Sentences” de Thomas d'Aquin et de ses précurseurs Albert le Grand et Bonaventure (review)
    Speculum 72 (4): 1167-1168. 1997.
    Thomas Aquinas
  •  42
    Analogy and philosophical language
    Yale University Press. 1973.
    Religious Imagination
  •  53
    Ghazali and the Poetics of Imagination – By Ebrahim Moosa
    Modern Theology 23 (3): 484-486. 2007.
    Philosophy of ReligionReligious TopicsIslam
  •  174
    Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) and Mulla Sadra Shirazi (980/1572–1050/1640) and the Primacy of esse/wuj$ucirc;d in Philosophical Theology (review)
    Journal of Nietzsche Studies 8 (2): 207-219. 1999.
    As an exercise in comparative philosophical theology, our approach is more concerned with conceptual strategies than with historical although the animadversions of those versed in the history of each period will assist in reading the texts of each thinker. We need historians to make us aware of the questions to which thinkers of other ages and cultures were directing their energies, as well as the forms of thought available to them in making their response; but we philosophers hope to be able to…Read more
    As an exercise in comparative philosophical theology, our approach is more concerned with conceptual strategies than with historical although the animadversions of those versed in the history of each period will assist in reading the texts of each thinker. We need historians to make us aware of the questions to which thinkers of other ages and cultures were directing their energies, as well as the forms of thought available to them in making their response; but we philosophers hope to be able to proceed without having to arm ourselves with extensive knowledge of the surrounding milieu, trusting that others more knowledgeable will correct and extend our efforts. Our contribution should then be one of offering perspectives within which further discourse may profitably proceed, suitably challenged and amended in the course of a common inquiry. Since my familiarity is with Aquinas, and since he comes chronologically first, I shall begin with him, though there is no discernible connection between the two thinkers other than their preoccupation with establishing the primacy of existing in a metaphysical discourse which had hitherto obscured its significance.
    Thomas Aquinas
  •  1
    Divine Practical Knowing: How an Eternal God Acts in Time
    In B. Hebblethwaite & E. Henderson (eds.), Divine Action, T Clark. pp. 93--102. 1990.
    Divine Omniscience, MiscDivine Omnipotence
  •  75
    Truth and Historicity
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 43 (n/a): 44-55. 1969.
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