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Jean-Luc Solere

Boston College
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  •  Publications
    72
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 More details
  • Boston College
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Medieval Philosophy: Topics, Misc
17th/18th Century Philosophy, Miscellaneous
Areas of Interest
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Medieval Metaphysics
Medieval Philosophy of Mind
Medieval Philosophy of Nature
Medieval Philosophy of Mathematics
Medieval Theology
Medieval Philosophy: Topics, Misc
Antoine Arnauld
Pierre Bayle
5 more
  • All publications (72)
  •  546
    Bayle, les théologiens catholiques et la rétorsion stratonicienne
    In Anthony McKenna & Gianni Paganini (eds.), Pierre Bayle et la République des Lettres. Philosophie, religion, critique. pp. 129-170. 2004.
    I first explain the scholastic (Scotist) thesis on the independence of essences Bayle alludes to in the passage of the Continuation des Pensée Diverses where he presents the Stratonicians' and the Chinese philosophers' retorsion. Then, I show that this retorsion applies to the argument of the existence of God based on "aseity", but not to the occasionalist argument based on the "quod nescis" principle. I conclude that materialism (the "Stratonician hypothesis") cannot be, for Bayle, a satisfying…Read more
    I first explain the scholastic (Scotist) thesis on the independence of essences Bayle alludes to in the passage of the Continuation des Pensée Diverses where he presents the Stratonicians' and the Chinese philosophers' retorsion. Then, I show that this retorsion applies to the argument of the existence of God based on "aseity", but not to the occasionalist argument based on the "quod nescis" principle. I conclude that materialism (the "Stratonician hypothesis") cannot be, for Bayle, a satisfying system.
    Pierre Bayle
  •  1
    Edition de la question ordinaire n° 18, « de intensione virtutum”, de Godefroid de Fontaines
    with Jean Céleyrette
    In José Meirinhos & Olga Weijers (eds.), Florilegium Medievale. Études offertes à Jacqueline Hamesse, Brepols Publishers. pp. 83-107. 2009.
    13th/14th Century Philosophy
  •  777
    Scepticisme, métaphysique et morale : le cas Bayle
    In Hubert Bost & Anthony McKenna (eds.), Les « Éclaircissements » de Bayle. pp. 499-524. 2010.
    In this paper, I examine the problem of Bayle's skepticism. I show that he is not a wholesale skeptic. Rather, he thinks that reason is plagued by internal conflicts. But its principles, which clash with each other, can be adopted separately from each other. It is often what we have to do when dealing with metaphysical problems. This also entails that reason is not to be rejected as a whole when it happens to be contradicted by faith; only some of its principles have to be denied, and solely in …Read more
    In this paper, I examine the problem of Bayle's skepticism. I show that he is not a wholesale skeptic. Rather, he thinks that reason is plagued by internal conflicts. But its principles, which clash with each other, can be adopted separately from each other. It is often what we have to do when dealing with metaphysical problems. This also entails that reason is not to be rejected as a whole when it happens to be contradicted by faith; only some of its principles have to be denied, and solely in that case. Further, Bayle believes that we possess absolute certainly in our knowledge of ethical principles. I show how this is compatible with his relativism in other domains by putting back his contention in the context of Reformed thought.
    Pierre Bayle
  •  1
    Was the eye in the tomb? On the metaphysical and historical interest of some strange quodlibetal questions
    In Christopher David Schabel (ed.), Theological Quodlibets in the Middle Ages, The Thirteenth Century, Brill. pp. 506-558. 2006.
  •  759
    Tension et intention. Esquisse de l’histoire d’une notion
    In Lambros Couloubaritsis & Antonino Mazzù (eds.), Questions sur l’Intentionnalité. pp. 59-124. 2007.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
  •  148
    Scotus versus Aquinas on Instrumental Causality
    Oxford Studies in Medieval Philosophy 7 (1). 2019.
    The medieval notion of instrumental cause is not limited to what we call today “instruments” or “tools.” It extends way beyond the realm of technology and includes natural entities, for instance, the accidents by which a substance acts on another substance, sensible species in the air acting on a visual faculty, sacraments, bodily organs, and sometimes creatures with respect to God’s action. In all these cases, instrumental causes, like secondary causes in general, are subordinated to a principa…Read more
    The medieval notion of instrumental cause is not limited to what we call today “instruments” or “tools.” It extends way beyond the realm of technology and includes natural entities, for instance, the accidents by which a substance acts on another substance, sensible species in the air acting on a visual faculty, sacraments, bodily organs, and sometimes creatures with respect to God’s action. In all these cases, instrumental causes, like secondary causes in general, are subordinated to a principal cause and contribute to its action and effects. However, the manner in which they do so makes them different from regular secondary causes, and the specifics are not easy to pinpoint. At the occasion of discussions about creation ex nihilo and sacraments, John Duns Scotus challenges Thomas Aquinas’s theory of instrumental causality. Whereas Aquinas does not strongly distinguish between artifacts and natural agents, and postulates a complex superposition of layers of causation, Scotus offers a novel view that clearly separates artificial instrumentality and natural instrumentality, and in both cases explains causation with great economy. Scotus’s in-depth discussion has far-reaching implications. It completely transforms the understanding of instrumental causality in general.
    Medieval MetaphysicsThomas AquinasJohn Duns Scotus
  •  43
    Thomas of Sutton on Intellectual habitus
    In Nicolas Faucher & Magali Roques (eds.), The Ontology, Psychology and Axiology of Habits (Habitus) in Medieval Philosophy, Springer Verlag. pp. 205-227. 2018.
    According to the Dominican Thomas of Sutton, the reception of intelligible species in the potential intellect is in every point similar to the actualization of forms in matter, which means that the potential intellect remains completely passive through the whole process of concept acquisition. However, Sutton adds that when the intelligible species are stored in the memory and aggregate in logically organized clusters, thus becoming intellectual habitus, they have a way of being that is not foun…Read more
    According to the Dominican Thomas of Sutton, the reception of intelligible species in the potential intellect is in every point similar to the actualization of forms in matter, which means that the potential intellect remains completely passive through the whole process of concept acquisition. However, Sutton adds that when the intelligible species are stored in the memory and aggregate in logically organized clusters, thus becoming intellectual habitus, they have a way of being that is not found in material things, namely, incomplete actuality. Without being properly speaking efficient causes of mental processes, they spontaneously tend to emerge by themselves into the light of awareness—even though other elements may in fact block them. This special sort of self-actualization is compatible, Sutton thinks, with the passivity he ascribes to the potential intellect.
    13th/14th Century PhilosophyMedieval Philosophy of Mind
  •  976
    Sine qua non causality and the context of Durand’s early theory of cognition
    In G. Guldentops, A. Speer, F. Retucci & Th Jeschke (eds.), Durand of Saint-Pourçain and his Sentences commentary. Historical, Philosophical and Theological Issues, Peeters Pub & Booksellers. pp. 185-227. 2014.
    This paper explores the origins of the term "causa sine qua non" used by Durand de Saint-Pourçain to describe the role of material things in knowledge. I show that its technical meaning comes from the Stoics and was transmitted to the Middle Ages by Boethius' commentary on Cicero's Topics. The expression "sine qua non" here does not have the ordinary and restricted meaning of "indispensable", "necessary condition", which can also apply to direct, per se causes of an effect. In the present contex…Read more
    This paper explores the origins of the term "causa sine qua non" used by Durand de Saint-Pourçain to describe the role of material things in knowledge. I show that its technical meaning comes from the Stoics and was transmitted to the Middle Ages by Boethius' commentary on Cicero's Topics. The expression "sine qua non" here does not have the ordinary and restricted meaning of "indispensable", "necessary condition", which can also apply to direct, per se causes of an effect. In the present context, sine qua non causes do not act on the effect in question, either as concomitant, secondary, or instrumental causes, or as remote causes. They act only on that which hinders the actualization of a potentiality, in order to remove that obstacle. For example, the removal of a support that prevented something from falling does not act on that thing, nor does it add anything to its tendency to fall; it simply enables that thing to exercise its own actualization. Similarly, in cognitive processes, external things do not impose anything on the soul, but simply give it the opportunity to actualize its faculties of its own accord. I situate Durand's use of this form of causality in the context of late 13th/early 14th century theories of cognition, among several other attempts to find an alternative theory to the standard Aristotelian model and to maintain the pure activity of the soul with respect to the body.
    13th/14th Century PhilosophyMedieval Philosophy of MindVarieties of Causation
  •  1
    Durand of Saint-Pourçain’s cognition theory: its fundamental principles
    In Medieval Perspectives on Aristotle’s De Anima. pp. 185-248. 2013.
    13th/14th Century PhilosophyMedieval Philosophy of Mind
  •  1
    Duns Scot à Paris. 1302-2002 (edited book)
    with Olivier Boulnois, Elisabeth Karger, and Gérard Sondag
    Brepols Publishers. 2004.
    xx.
    13th/14th Century Philosophy
  •  45
    Le Contemplateur et les Idées. Modèles de la science divine, du néoplatonisme au XVIIIe siècle (edited book)
    with Olivier Boulnois and Jacob Schmutz
    Vrin. 2002.
    Recueil de contributions sur la connaissance du monde par Dieu et sur le statut des vérités objectives de la science montrant la diversité des approches proposées par des philosophes tels que Thomas d'Aquin, Duns Scot, Guillaume d'Ockham, François de Meyronnes, Nicolas Malebranche, Pierre Bayle...
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy17th/18th Century PhilosophyFrench Philosophy
  • L’Embryon : Formation et Animation. Antiquité grecque et latine, traditions hébraïque, chrétienne et islamique (edited book)
    with Luc Brisson and Marie-Hélène Congourdeau
    Vrin. 2008.
    xx.
  •  53
    Alain de Lille, le docteur universel (edited book)
    with Alain Galonnier and Anca Vasiliu
    Brepols. 2005.
    xx
  •  34
    La Servante et la Consolatrice. La philosophie dans ses rapports avec la théologie au Moyen Âge (edited book)
    with Zenon Kałuża
    Vrin. 2002.
    Certains penseurs médiévaux jugeaient la philosophie incapable de juger et d'interpréter la parole révélée donc supérieure. Pour d'autres, elle gardait son prestige antique et pouvait les mener à la perfection et à la félicité. Ces contributions étudient non pas la philosophie du Moyen âge dans son ensemble, ce qui n'est pas possible, mais des personnalités particulières, dont des théologiens.
    Medieval Theology
  •  1
    Bayle
    In Sacha Golob & Jens Timmermann (eds.), The Cambridge History of Moral Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. pp. 157-267. 2017.
    xx
    Value TheoryPierre Bayle
  • Intellect and Intellectual Cognition According to James of Viterbo
    In Antoine Côté & Martin Pickavé (eds.), A Companion to James of Viterbo, Brill. pp. 218-248. 2018.
    Due to his innatist theory, James of Viterbo brings original answers to a number of late-thirteenth century questions concerning cognition. While he maintains a certain distinction between the soul and its faculties, and among these faculties, he rejects the Aristotelian distinction between agent and patient intellects. Thanks to its predispositions to knowing, the mind is able to be an agent for itself. Correlatively, James rejects the usual conception of abstraction. Neither does the intellect…Read more
    Due to his innatist theory, James of Viterbo brings original answers to a number of late-thirteenth century questions concerning cognition. While he maintains a certain distinction between the soul and its faculties, and among these faculties, he rejects the Aristotelian distinction between agent and patient intellects. Thanks to its predispositions to knowing, the mind is able to be an agent for itself. Correlatively, James rejects the usual conception of abstraction. Neither does the intellect act on the phantasms, nor the phantasms on the intellect. The intellect simply actualizes a conceptual scheme at the occasion of adequate sensory representations. Since the innate predispositions are the intrinsic principles of cognitive acts, James maintains with Giles of Rome the notion of intelligible species. But he agrees with Godfrey of Fontaines that an act of intellection is nothing else than the fully actualized species itself. He also concedes to Henry of Ghent that the form of an intelligible object need not be ontologically received in the intellect, but can just have an “objective” presence. Finally, thanks again to his theory of predispositions, he has an easy solution to the vexed problems of the knowledge of substance essences and of the self.
    13th/14th Century PhilosophyMedieval Philosophy of Mind
  • James of Viterbo's Innatist Theory of Cognition
    In Antoine Côté & Martin Pickavé (eds.), A Companion to James of Viterbo, Brill. pp. 168-217. 2018.
    James of Viterbio is one of the rare medieval authors to sustain a thoroughly innatist philosophy. He borrows from Simplicius the notion of idoneitas (aptitude, predisposition) so as to ground a cognition theory in which external things are not the efficient and formal causes of mental acts. A predisposition has the characteristic of being halfway between potentiality and actuality. Therefore, the subject that has predispositions does not need to be acted upon by another thing to actualize them.…Read more
    James of Viterbio is one of the rare medieval authors to sustain a thoroughly innatist philosophy. He borrows from Simplicius the notion of idoneitas (aptitude, predisposition) so as to ground a cognition theory in which external things are not the efficient and formal causes of mental acts. A predisposition has the characteristic of being halfway between potentiality and actuality. Therefore, the subject that has predispositions does not need to be acted upon by another thing to actualize them. External things only “incline” the mind to make use of a stock of cognitive schemes. Consequently, in order to avoid an infinite regress James must adopt innatism. Following the lead of late Neoplatonism, he goes as far as including, not only conceptual schemes, but also perceptual schemes among the inbuilt stock. As a result, James’s theory, while it echoes certain preoccupations and themes that are common in the thirteenth century, proves to be one of a kind.
    The Nature of Perceptual ExperiencePerception-Based Theories of ConceptsPerception and ThoughtInfere…Read more
    The Nature of Perceptual ExperiencePerception-Based Theories of ConceptsPerception and ThoughtInferential Theories of ConceptsMedieval Philosophy of MindInnate Concepts13th/14th Century PhilosophyPerception and SkepticismPerceptual Evidence
  •  61
    Commission VI: Instruments of Research and Electronic Resources
    Bulletin de Philosophie Medievale 50 3-13. 2008.
    Medieval Studies
  •  76
    Leibniz et Bayle: confrontation et dialogue (edited book)
    with Christian Leduc and Paul Rateau
    Franz Steiner Verlag. 2015.
    Les textes reunis dans ce volume visent a combler une importante lacune : l'absence d'etude d'ampleur consacree specifiquement aux relations entre Pierre Bayle et Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, permettant d'evaluer l'influence qu'ils ont exercee l'un sur l'autre, par leurs ecrits et leurs echanges, directs et indirects.Le but est de confronter ces deux philosophes majeurs du XVIIe siecle, en cherchant a depasser l'opposition reductrice entre scepticisme d'un cote et rationalisme dogmatique de l'autr…Read more
    Les textes reunis dans ce volume visent a combler une importante lacune : l'absence d'etude d'ampleur consacree specifiquement aux relations entre Pierre Bayle et Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, permettant d'evaluer l'influence qu'ils ont exercee l'un sur l'autre, par leurs ecrits et leurs echanges, directs et indirects.Le but est de confronter ces deux philosophes majeurs du XVIIe siecle, en cherchant a depasser l'opposition reductrice entre scepticisme d'un cote et rationalisme dogmatique de l'autre. L'etude de leurs rapports montre les differentes etapes et la fecondite de leurs echanges : d'abord autour de la critique de la physique de Descartes, ensuite a propos du « systeme de l'harmonie preetablie » defendu par Leibniz mais critique par Bayle dans son Dictionnaire historique et critique, enfin au sujet du rapport entre foi et raison, du probleme du mal et de la justification de Dieu.
    Leibniz, MiscPierre Bayle
  •  36
    Adam Burlaeus et Gualterus Burlaeus, Questions on the «De Anima» of Aristotle by Magister Adam Burley & Dominus Walter Burley. Edited by Edward A. Synan (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 98 (2): 367-368. 2000.
  •  31
    François-Xavier Putallaz, Figures franciscaines de Bonaventure à Duns Scot (review)
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 98 (2): 366-367. 2000.
  •  4
    Thomistes et antithomistes face à la question de l'infini créé: Durand de Saint-Pourçain, Hervé de Nédellec et Jacques de Metz
    Revue Thomiste 97 (1): 219-244. 1997.
  •  5
    Les variations qualitatives dans les théories post-thomistes
    Revue Thomiste 112 (1): 157-204. 2012.
    La solution de Thomas d’Aquin au problème de l’intensification des qualités souffre d’une certaine instabilité et, dans la génération suivante, a été disloquée par les différentes contraintes qu’elle tentait de concilier. Cet article explore les réponses apportées par Gilles de Rome, Godefroid de Fontaines, Pierre d’Auvergne et Thomas de Sutton. Introduite par Godefroid, mais développée par Sutton, la notion de mode va jouer un rôle très important. La solution de Sutton, particulièrement, invit…Read more
    La solution de Thomas d’Aquin au problème de l’intensification des qualités souffre d’une certaine instabilité et, dans la génération suivante, a été disloquée par les différentes contraintes qu’elle tentait de concilier. Cet article explore les réponses apportées par Gilles de Rome, Godefroid de Fontaines, Pierre d’Auvergne et Thomas de Sutton. Introduite par Godefroid, mais développée par Sutton, la notion de mode va jouer un rôle très important. La solution de Sutton, particulièrement, invite à une comparaison avec la théorie des modes intrinsèques chez Duns Scot.
    Medieval MetaphysicsMedieval Philosophy of Nature13th/14th Century Philosophy, Misc
  • Illich . Du Lisible au Visible. Sur L'Art de Lire de Hugues de Saint-Victor (review)
    Revue Belge de Philologie Et D’Histoire 71 (4): 942-945. 1993.
  •  1207
    Bien, sphere et hebdomades: L'art d'écrire chez Boèce et Proclus
    In Edouard Bonnefous & Alain Galonnier (eds.), Boèce Ou La Chaîne des Savoirs: Actes Du Colloque International De La Fondation Singer-Polignac, Présidée Par Edouard Bonnefous, Paris, 8-12 Juin 1999 ; Édités Par Alain Galonnier ; Préface De Roshdi Rashed ; Introduction De Pierre Magnard, Peeters. pp. 55-110. 2003.
    Hellenistic and Later Ancient Philosophy, MiscProclusNeoplatonists, MiscBoethius
  •  890
    The Question of Intensive Magnitudes According to Some Jesuits in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
    The Monist 84 (4): 582-616. 2001.
    The problem of the intensification and remission of qualities was a crux for philosophical, theological, and scientific thought in the Middle Ages. It was raised in Antiquity with this remark of Aristotle: some qualities, as accidental beings, admit the more and the less. Admitting more and less is not a trivial property, since it belongs neither to every category of being, nor to every quality. Rather it applies only to states and dispositions such as virtue, to affections of bodies such as hea…Read more
    The problem of the intensification and remission of qualities was a crux for philosophical, theological, and scientific thought in the Middle Ages. It was raised in Antiquity with this remark of Aristotle: some qualities, as accidental beings, admit the more and the less. Admitting more and less is not a trivial property, since it belongs neither to every category of being, nor to every quality. Rather it applies only to states and dispositions such as virtue, to affections of bodies such as heat and sweetness, and to affections of soul such as anger. However, the property of admitting more and less was a matter of importance for the qualitative physics that had reigned up to about the time of Descartes, a physics which was concerned with concepts such as heat, coldness, lightness, heaviness, and so on.
    Medieval Philosophy of Nature15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscMetaphysics
  •  76
    L'image comme philosophème
    Chôra 3 47-68. 2005.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
  •  65
    Bayle historien et critique du matérialisme dans le dictionnaire
    Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 50 (120): 423-436. 2009.
    Pierre BayleContinental Political Philosophy
  • Pierre le Chantre . Glossae super Genesim. Prologus et capitula 1-3 (review)
    Revue Belge de Philologie Et D’Histoire 73 (4): 1144-1145. 1995.
  • Jean de Fêcamp. La Confession théologique. Introduction, traduction et notes par dom Philippe de Vial (review)
    Revue Belge de Philologie Et D’Histoire 73 (4): 1143-1144. 1995.
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