• PhilPapers
  • PhilPeople
  • PhilArchive
  • PhilEvents
  • PhilJobs
  • Sign in
PhilPeople
 
  • Sign in
  • News Feed
  • Find Philosophers
  • Departments
  • Radar
  • Help
 
profile-cover
Drag to reposition
profile picture

Paul Richard Blum

Loyola University Maryland
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    94
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
    48
  •  Philosophical Views

 More details
  • Loyola University Maryland
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
LMU Munich
Faculty of Philosophy, Philosophy of Science and Religious Studies
PhD, 1978
Homepage
Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Religion
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Religion
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
History of Western Philosophy, Misc
Natural Sciences
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
2 more
  • All publications (94)
  • The Young Paul Oskar Kristeller as a Philosopher
    In John Monfasani (ed.), Kristeller reconsidered: essays on his life and scholarship, Italica Press. 2006.
    History of Western Philosophy, Misc
  •  1174
    Gasparo Contarini’s Response to Pomponazzi: A Methodic Antidote to Physicalism of the Mind
    In A Magyarországi Aquinói Szent Tamás Társaság Közleménei [Communications of the Hungarian Thomas Aquinas Society] 2, . pp. 7-20. 2013.
    European Philosophy15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscPhysicalism about the Mind, Misc
  •  79
    La métaphysique comme théologie naturelle : Bartolomeo Mastri
    Les Etudes Philosophiques 1 (1): 31. 2002.
    L’élaboration d’une théorie de l’objet sert de guide à la doctrine de la science en général, et à l’élaboration formelle du statut de la métaphysique en particulier. L’étude de Paul Richard Blum porte sur l’objet de la métaphysique selon Bartholomaeus Mastrius : l’auteur y dégage les principales positions de Mastrius, débouchant, à la suite de son modèle scotiste, sur une ontologie formelle totalement détachée de la physique, à la différence de la tradition thomiste.The elaboration of the theory…Read more
    L’élaboration d’une théorie de l’objet sert de guide à la doctrine de la science en général, et à l’élaboration formelle du statut de la métaphysique en particulier. L’étude de Paul Richard Blum porte sur l’objet de la métaphysique selon Bartholomaeus Mastrius : l’auteur y dégage les principales positions de Mastrius, débouchant, à la suite de son modèle scotiste, sur une ontologie formelle totalement détachée de la physique, à la différence de la tradition thomiste.The elaboration of the theory of object directs the theory of science in general, and specifically the formal elaboration of the status of metaphysics. Paul Richard Blum’s study deals with the object of metaphysics according to Bartholomaeus Mastrius : the author outlines Mastrius’ principal positions. His metaphysics leads, according to its Scotistic model, to a purely formal ontology, completely severed from physics, contrasting with the Thomistic tradition.
  • Trinity and Triangle -- Giordano Bruno's Secularizing of the Cusanian Trinity
    Soter 14 (42): 41-48. 2004.
    Nicholas of Cusa (1402-1464) explored the boundaries of human reason for the sake of making religious belief believable. Unwillingly, he became a milestone in the process of rationalizing Christian theology. Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) is a proof to this perspective by the way he makes use of Cusanus’s approach. In his ’Spaccio de la bestia trionfante’, Bruno discusses Cusanus’s attempts at the geometrical problem of squaring the circle. Bruno not only promotes his atomistic geometry, he also use…Read more
    Nicholas of Cusa (1402-1464) explored the boundaries of human reason for the sake of making religious belief believable. Unwillingly, he became a milestone in the process of rationalizing Christian theology. Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) is a proof to this perspective by the way he makes use of Cusanus’s approach. In his ’Spaccio de la bestia trionfante’, Bruno discusses Cusanus’s attempts at the geometrical problem of squaring the circle. Bruno not only promotes his atomistic geometry, he also uses the metaphoric meaning of triangle for Trinity as an occasion to supplant ’faith’ with ’sincerity’. For Bruno faith is not anymore the true belief of religion, but rather ’good faith’ and fidelity, i.e., social and political virtues.
    The Trinity
  •  2
    Heroic Exercises: Giordano Bruno’s De gli eroici furori as a Response to Ignatius of Loyola’s Exercitia spiritualia
    Brunina and Campanelliana 18 359-373. 2012.
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  128
    Platonic References in Pererius’s Comments on the Bible
    Quaestio 14 215-227. 2014.
    Benedictus Pererius as a 16th-century Jesuit integrated Platonic and Neo-Platonic sources in his philosophical and theological works as long as they were compatible with Catholic theology. His commentary on Genesis and his theological disputations on St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans gave occasions to calibrate philosophy against theology. Pererius judges that pagan thinkers may be laudable for acknowledging the existence of God but cautions Christian readers as to the orthodoxy of such findings. …Read more
    Benedictus Pererius as a 16th-century Jesuit integrated Platonic and Neo-Platonic sources in his philosophical and theological works as long as they were compatible with Catholic theology. His commentary on Genesis and his theological disputations on St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans gave occasions to calibrate philosophy against theology. Pererius judges that pagan thinkers may be laudable for acknowledging the existence of God but cautions Christian readers as to the orthodoxy of such findings. Against the Protestant literalist interpretation of the Bible at the expense of philosophical theory of nature Pererius dealt with the questions of immortality and of the pagan notions of divinity and examined the role of philosophical heroes like Socrates and Hermes. Thus he welcomed philosophy as a potential source of religious thinking.
  • Einleitung. Philosophie in der Renaissance
    In Philosophen der Renaissance, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft/primus. 1999.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscRenaissance HumanismMichel de Montaigne13th/14th Century Ph…Read more
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscRenaissance HumanismMichel de Montaigne13th/14th Century Philosophy, MiscByzantine PhilosophyGiordano BrunoMarcilio FicinoFrancisco SuárezNiccolo Machiavelli15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  59
    Bildung und Unbildung im 16. Jahrhundert Ein Gastseminar in Wolfenbüttel
    Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 6 (1-4): 194-194. 1983.
  •  69
    Philosophie der frühen Neuzeit in den böhmischen Ländern
    Intellectual History Review 20 (4): 531-533. 2010.
    No abstract.
    History of Western Philosophy
  •  85
    Humanism and Early Modern Philosophy (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (1): 121-122. 2002.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.1 (2002) 121-122 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Humanism and Early Modern Philosophy Jill Kraye and M. W. F. Stone, editors. Humanism and Early Modern Philosophy. New York: Routledge, 2000. Pp. xii + 270. Cloth, $75.00 Early-modern philosophy begins in the seventeenth century. This book, based on a colloquium at the Warburg Institute, London in 1997, strives at extending the limits of this…Read more
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.1 (2002) 121-122 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Humanism and Early Modern Philosophy Jill Kraye and M. W. F. Stone, editors. Humanism and Early Modern Philosophy. New York: Routledge, 2000. Pp. xii + 270. Cloth, $75.00 Early-modern philosophy begins in the seventeenth century. This book, based on a colloquium at the Warburg Institute, London in 1997, strives at extending the limits of this period into the sixteenth and fifteenth centuries. Thus "the long-standing exclusion of the Renaissance from the standard philosophical curriculum" (xii) should come to an end by acknowledging its being an integral part of early modern philosophy and its relevance for an understanding of modern thought. The distinctive element of the Renaissance was, according to the editors, humanism, understood as the revival of ancient sources from the fourteenth century on, and its impact on the shaping of modern thought by these sources.One can identify the following types of argument offered in the twelve contributions to this book: (1) Renaissance humanists mediated classical sources into the seventeenth and following centuries either by translating Greek texts into Latin (Lohr on Aristotle commentaries) or by offering new interpretations that were to become standard (Hankins on Ficino and Galileo, and Mercer on the German Platonists). (2) Ancient modes of thought, mediated through the Renaissance, shaped modern philosophy (Stone on Aristotelian and Reformed ethics, Levi on Stoicism in Justus Lipsius, Kraye on Marcus Aurelius editions, and Osler on Gassendi and Aristotle). (3) Humanist literary forms and mentalities survived in modern thought (Bianchi on dialogue, Vickers on rhetoric in Bacon, and James on 'grandeur' and scientific argument).Two papers do not fit into this scheme: in "The Theology of Lorenzo Valla," the only paper dealing directly with a Renaissance humanist, Monfasani wants to prove that "Valla was no theologian." Monfasani does this on the basis of a very narrow concept of dogmatic correctness, blaming Valla continuously for being banal, to the effect that the paper does not contribute to the topic of the book. One could well connect Valla's theological issues (free will, summum bonum, trinity, etc.) with his provocative stirring up of philosophy in general and show his influence on Protestant theology and on modern ethics.The other paper is by J. R. Milton, which is enlightening because it summarizes the prejudices against humanism in modern philosophy ("'Delicate learning,' erudition and the enterprise of philosophy"). He endorses "one of the most familiar narratives in European philosophy" (161), namely that Descartes's breakthrough was due to his total rupture [End Page 121] with the philosophical tradition, especially with contemporary humanist and scholastic thought. Thus Descartes's triumph was that of the myth of the irrelevance of history to philosophy as evident in Galileo, Locke, and even Hume. If antecedents are acknowledged, e.g., in Berkeley, then accepting that they "provide us either with an irreplaceable source of wisdom or with equally irreplaceable models for imitation, or indeed both" (167), still fails to recognize that the history of a philosophical problem is a part of that problem rather than just some general "wisdom" or a model for imitation. Of course, Milton repeats the myth of Bacon's anti-humanism, masterly refuted in this very book by Brian Vickers, and Milton believes that Valla "enthroned" "custom and example" and therefore for him "it would be difficult if not impossible to state Hempel's Raven Paradox" (169). One might wonder whether the conclusion: "All ravens are black --all non-black things are non-ravens," is the paramount of modern philosophy. But a thorough reader of Valla's logic might discover similarities to pragmatism, which are fostered by his deep criticism of language with the tools of Renaissance humanism. However, Descartes's indebtedness to Renaissance method and rhetoric is handbook knowledge today.The audience for this collection of samples are specialists either in seventeenth- or eighteenth-century philosophy, or in Renaissance thought, or even philosophers in the narrow sense of the disciplines. The latter are difficult to convince of the usefulness of historic studies or "erudite activity" (Milton...
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy15th/16th Century Philosophy
  •  140
    The Epistemology of Immortality: Searle, Pomponazzi, and Ficino
    Studia Neoaristotelica 9 (1): 85-102. 2012.
    The relationship between body and mind was traditionally discussed in terms of immortality of the intellect, because immateriality was one necessary condition for the mind to be immortal. This appeared to be an issue of metaphysics and religion. But to the medieval and Renaissance thinkers, the essence of mind is thinking activity and hence an epistemological feature. Starting with John Searle’s worries about the existence of consciousness, I try to show some parallels with the Aristotelian Piet…Read more
    The relationship between body and mind was traditionally discussed in terms of immortality of the intellect, because immateriality was one necessary condition for the mind to be immortal. This appeared to be an issue of metaphysics and religion. But to the medieval and Renaissance thinkers, the essence of mind is thinking activity and hence an epistemological feature. Starting with John Searle’s worries about the existence of consciousness, I try to show some parallels with the Aristotelian Pietro Pomponazzi (1462–1525), and eventually show the Neoplatonic approach in Marsilio Ficino (1433–1499). The guiding question is: how can one philosophically address the problem of cognition in terms of corporeality and incorporeality? Searle maintains there is mind, although essentially related to a biological basis, and he is comparable to the Renaissance thinkers for his taking the interaction of the mental and the corporeal seriously.
  •  50
    Maja Kallinen: Change and Stability. Natural Philosophy at the Academy of Turku (1640–1713). (Suomen Historiallinen Seura ‐ Finnish Historical Society: Studia Historica, Bd 51) Helsinki 1995. 439 Seiten. ISBN 951‐710‐001‐6 (review)
    Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 21 (1): 4-4. 1998.
  •  39
    Theories of Life in the Renaissance
    Annals of Science 70 (4): 539-543. 2013.
    No abstract.
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  • Jacques Maritain Against Modern Pseudo-Humanism, in: Atti del Congresso Tomista Internazionale su l’Umanesimo Cristiano nel III Millennio: La Prospettiva di Tommaso d’Aquino, 21-25 Settembre 2003, Vatican City (Pontificia Academia Sancti Thomae Aquinatis) 2004, 780-791 (also available at: http://e-aquinas.net/pdf/blum.pdf) (review)
    Http://E-Aquinas.Net/Pdf/Blum.Pdf. 2004.
  • Sapientiam amemus, Humanismus und Aristotelismus in der Renaissance (edited book)
    Fink. 1999.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Miscellaneous15th/16th Century PhilosophyMedieval and Renaissan…Read more
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Miscellaneous15th/16th Century PhilosophyMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Misc
  •  49
    Giordano Bruno
    Beck. 1999.
    Vorbemerkung „Nichts unter der Sonne ist neu," war Giordano Brunos Leitspruch. Dennoch ist es angebracht, ihn als einen Denker vorzustellen, der eine eigene...
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Misc15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  9
    Epistemology and Cosmology in Neoplatonism: Is Cognition a Mind-Body-Problem? Paper at Cosmos, Nature, Culture - A Transdisciplinary Conference Metanexus Conference July 18-21, 2009, Phoenix, Arizona (review)
    http://www.metanexus.net/conference2009/articles/Default.aspx?id=10790. 2009.
    Epistemology, MiscellaneousPhilosophy of Mind, MiscellaneousMind-Body Problem, General
  •  23
    Platonische Liebe: Eine wahre Geschichte
    In Günter Frank, Anja Hallacker & Sebastian Lalla (eds.), Erzählende Vernunft, Akademie Verlag. pp. 19-28. 2006.
  • A Természet, Mint Személy: Adalékok a természet fogalmának történetéhez
    Magyar Filozofiai Szemle 4. 2001.
  • On Popular Platonism: Giovanni Pico with Elia del Medigo against Marsilio Ficino
    In Sabrina Ebbersmeyer (ed.), Sol et homo. Mensch und Natur in der Renaissance, Fink. 2008.
  •  80
    Wonder and Wondering in the Renaissance
    with Elisabeth Blum
    In Michael Funk Deckard & Péter Losonczi (eds.), Philosophy Begins in Wonder: An Introduction to Early Modern Philosophy, Theology, and Science, Pickwick. 2010.
    Wonder, miracle, occult science, poetry, and the epistemological implications in Renaissance authors: Marsilio Ficino, Giovanni Pico, Pietro Pomponazzi, Agrippa of Nettesheim, Giordano Bruno, Francesco Patrizi, Tommaso Campanella, Francisco Suárez.
    Miracles, Misc15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscIberian Phi…Read more
    Miracles, Misc15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscIberian Philosophy
  •  1941
    Michael Polanyi: Can the Mind Be Represented by a Machine?
    Polanyiana 19 (1-2): 35-60. 2010.
    In 1949, the Department of Philosophy at the University of Manchester organized a symposium “Mind and Machine” with Michael Polanyi, the mathematicians Alan Turing and Max Newman, the neurologists Geoff rey Jeff erson and J. Z. Young, and others as participants. Th is event is known among Turing scholars, because it laid the seed for Turing’s famous paper on “Computing Machinery and Intelligence”, but it is scarcely documented. Here, the transcript of this event, together with Polanyi’s original…Read more
    In 1949, the Department of Philosophy at the University of Manchester organized a symposium “Mind and Machine” with Michael Polanyi, the mathematicians Alan Turing and Max Newman, the neurologists Geoff rey Jeff erson and J. Z. Young, and others as participants. Th is event is known among Turing scholars, because it laid the seed for Turing’s famous paper on “Computing Machinery and Intelligence”, but it is scarcely documented. Here, the transcript of this event, together with Polanyi’s original statement and his notes taken at a lecture by Jeff erson, are edited and commented for the fi rst time. Th e originals are in the Regenstein Library of the University of Chicago. Th e introduction highlights elements of the debate that included neurophysiology, mathematics, the mind-body-machine problem, and consciousness and shows that Turing’s approach, as documented here, does not lend itself to reductionism.
    20th Century PhilosophySymbols and Symbol SystemsArtificial ConsciousnessArtificial Minds, Misc
  • Lorenzo valla (1406/7-1457) : Humanism as philosophy
    In Philosophers of the Renaissance, Catholic University of America Press. 2010.
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  115
    The Historiographical Concept 'System of Philosophy': Its Origin, Nature, Influence, and Legitimacy
    Intellectual History Review 20 (2): 295-297. 2010.
    No abstract.
    History of Western Philosophy
  •  89
    I felt so tall within: Anthroplogy in Slave Narratives
    Annals of Cultural Studies (Roczniki Kulturoznawcze) 4 (2): 21-39. 2013.
    SlaveryTopics in African-American Philosophy, MiscNarrative Explanation
  • Pico, theology, and the church
    In M. V. Dougherty (ed.), Pico Della Mirandola: New Essays, Cambridge University Press. 2007.
    History of Western Philosophy, Misc
  •  58
    Erfahrung, Weltbild und Erkenntnis bei Nikolaus Cusanus†
    Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 14 (2): 97-105. 1991.
    To explain the interaction of stillness and motion of thought, Nicholas Cusanus formulated his renowned comparison with a cosmographer, which through five gateways, corresponding to the five senses, receives information about the world in the form of messages. What follows therefrom is not directly an analysis of the world but of the Creator, whom the philosopher mirrors in himself as a creator of scientific symbols.Cusanus was repeatedly suspected of Pantheism. What is crucial, however, for the…Read more
    To explain the interaction of stillness and motion of thought, Nicholas Cusanus formulated his renowned comparison with a cosmographer, which through five gateways, corresponding to the five senses, receives information about the world in the form of messages. What follows therefrom is not directly an analysis of the world but of the Creator, whom the philosopher mirrors in himself as a creator of scientific symbols.Cusanus was repeatedly suspected of Pantheism. What is crucial, however, for the critique of reasonning is the parallelism, that God's omnipresence in his creation corresponds to a universal capacity of the human mind to perceive everything by means of a hypothetical otherness. Therefrom proceeds the general projection that everything can be seen in mathematical terms. Mathematical calculating, working with figures, reducing to units, leads Cusanus to God's creative power as much as to the functioning of the intellect.However, his renowned mental experiments on the minimum and maximum were purely in pursuit of the goal of describing the fluid frontiers of defined thought. This is also true of his cosmology. Cusanus argued mathematically in order to prove the non-mathematical and the non-realistic.
  •  576
    Cultivating Talents and Social Responsibility
    Https://Inside.Loyola.Edu/Teams/Peace_and_justice_studies/Lists/Team%20Discussion/Attachments/1/Blum%20cultivating%20talents%20revised.Pdf
    Value Theory, MiscellaneousJustice, Misc
  • Philosophen der Renaissance (edited book)
    Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft/Primus. 1999.
  •  16
    Soldier or Scholar: Stratocles or War
    with Pontanus,S. J. , Jacobus and Thomas McCreight
    Apprendice House. 2009.
    ISBN-13: 978-1934074480
    Plot Summary from the book:
    "An aristocratic young man, fed up with his studies, contemplates military service. His teacher is unable by any reasoning to call him back him from the path he has embarked upon. The young man enlists another youth who commits himself to the journey, dressed in military garb, and he happens upon two deserting soldiers, unsightly and ill-used both in their dress and in their hygiene. Both young men are so moved by the deserters’ remarks depl…

    Read more
    ISBN-13: 978-1934074480
    Plot Summary from the book:
    "An aristocratic young man, fed up with his studies, contemplates military service. His teacher is unable by any reasoning to call him back him from the path he has embarked upon. The young man enlists another youth who commits himself to the journey, dressed in military garb, and he happens upon two deserting soldiers, unsightly and ill-used both in their dress and in their hygiene. Both young men are so moved by the deserters’ remarks deploring and reviling their lot in life that they return to their studies. One of the deserters, however, hopes to be welcomed back by the wife and small children he had deserted and left penniless and bereft of friends. She gives him a nasty reception, with verbal and corporal abuse, and he barely manages to have his sin forgiven and to return to her good graces."
    From the Table of Contents:
    Introduction
    How to Use this Book
    Jacobus Pontanus: Biography
    Jesuit Comedy – Seriously?
    The Stratocles as a Spiritual Exercise
    Just War and the Morality of Military Service
    A Play about War and the Real Wars of Pontanus' Time
    The Characters and Their Names
    Pontanus’ Use of Classical Sources
    The History of the Text of Stratocles
    Performance
    Stratocles or War
    Endnotes
    Appendices
    Pontanus on Humanist Studies
    Pontanus on Writing Comedy
    Renaissance School Hazing, called “Deposition”
    Anonymous: Instructions for Deposition
    Dialogue on Hazing (Progymnasma 100)
    .
    Theater15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscEducationEthics and Justification of WarJust War TheoryWar,…Read more
    Theater15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscEducationEthics and Justification of WarJust War TheoryWar, Misc
  • Prev.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next
PhilPeople logo

On this site

  • Find a philosopher
  • Find a department
  • The Radar
  • Index of professional philosophers
  • Index of departments
  • Help
  • Acknowledgments
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Terms and conditions

Brought to you by

  • The PhilPapers Foundation
  • The American Philosophical Association
  • Centre for Digital Philosophy, Western University
PhilPeople is currently in Beta Sponsored by the PhilPapers Foundation and the American Philosophical Association
Feedback