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107Evidence for the Use of Adam of Buckfield's Writings at Paris: A Note on New Haven, Yale University, Historical-Medical Library 12Mediaeval Studies 54 (1): 308-316. 1992.
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51St. Albert on the Subject of Metaphysics and Demonstrating the Existence of GodJournal of Nietzsche Studies 2 31-52. 1992.
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136Nature, Freedom, and WillProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 81 1-23. 2007.
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1John Duns Scotus, Questions on the Metaphysics of Aristotle (ca. 1300)In Jorge J. E. Gracia, Gregory M. Reichberg & Bernard N. Schumacher (eds.), The Classics of Western Philosophy: A Reader's Guide, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 167. 2003.
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68William of Ockham and the Divine FreedomReview of Metaphysics 48 (1): 142-143. 1994.In this slim volume, Klocker intends to offer a different and more sympathetic reading of Ockham's philosophical and theological ideas than that afforded by what Klocker terms the "traditional view." According to the latter view, chiefly found in the writings of Etienne Gilson and Anton Pegis, Ockham's thought is fundamentally skeptical, a medieval precursor of the philosophical skepticism of Hume in the eighteenth century. Klocker proposes instead to present Ockham's thought as inspired by the …Read more
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147Habitual Intellectual Knowledge in Medieval PhilosophyProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88 49-70. 2014.This lecture treats the theme of habitual cognition in both its commonplace and unusual senses in the tradition of ancient and medieval philosophy. Beginning with Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics and its teaching on habits, it traces how the ancient and medieval Peripatetic tradition received and developed the idea of habitual knowledge. The lecture then turns to three case-studies in which the notion of habitual knowledge is used in unusual senses: Aquinas’s treatment of self-knowledge; Scotus’s …Read more
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60Categories and Logic in Duns Scotus: An Interpretation of Aristotle’s “Categories” in the Late Thirteenth CenturyReview of Metaphysics 56 (4): 895-896. 2003.In this clearly written and impressive volume, Giorgio Pini has provided the first systematic book-length study of Duns Scotus’s doctrine of the categories and an extremely useful sketch of his views on logic generally. Divided into six chapters, the work covers the gamut of interpretations of Aristotle’s Categories over the course of the thirteenth century, ranging from the views of Robert Kilwardby and Albertus Magnus in the 1240s to the leading opinions of the 1280s and 1290s, those held by R…Read more
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12Scotus on Mind and being: transcendental and developmental psychologyActa Philosophica 18 (2): 249-282. 2009.
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B. Referate uber fremdsprachige Neuerscheinungen-A Companion to Philosophy in the Middle AgesPhilosophischer Literaturanzeiger 59 (3): 301. 2006.
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163Roger Bacon and Richard Rufus on Aristotle's metaphysics: A search for the grounds of disagreementVivarium 35 (2): 251-265. 1997.