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24Ockham on Priority and PosteriorityIn Calvin G. Normore & Stephan Schmid (eds.), Grounding in Medieval Philosophy, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 177-201. 2024.Does William Ockham believe in a metaphysical form of grounding? In particular, does Aristotelian natural priority (as Ockham understands it) qualify as a kind of metaphysical grounding? I offer a close analysis of Ockham’s texts, and I suggest that the answer is probably no. In the course of my analysis, I show that Ockham sparks a debate about priority that was taken up by other fourteenth century thinkers, and I show that Ockham’s view is striking because he so sharply separates natural prior…Read more
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The Routledge Companion to Medieval Philosophy (edited book)Routledge. 2016._The Routledge Companion to Feminist Philosophy_ is an outstanding guide and reference source to the key topics, subjects, thinkers, and debates in feminist philosophy. Fifty-six chapters, written by an international team of contributors specifically for the _Companion_, are organized into five sections: (1) Engaging the Past (2) Mind, Body, and World (3) Knowledge, Language, and Science (4) Intersections (5) Ethics, Politics, and Aesthetics. The volume provides a mutually enriching representati…Read more
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202Duns Scotus on Identities — I Mean, Mereological FusionsTheoria 87 (5): 1270-1306. 2021.I argue that Scotus's formal distinction is a mereological fusion relation rather than an identity relation. I construct mereological models which adequately represent Scotus's theory.
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92Arius and Athanasius on the Production of God’s SonFaith and Philosophy 27 (4): 382-404. 2010.Arius maintains that the Father must produce the Son without any pre-existing ingredients (ex nihilo) because no such ingredients are available to the Father. Athanasius denies this, insisting not only that the Father himself becomes an ingredient in the Son, but also that the Son inherits his divine properties from that ingredient. I argue, however, that it is difficult to explain exactly how the Son could inherit certain properties but not others from something he is not identical to, just as …Read more
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88Divine Production in Late Medieval Trinitarian Theology: Henry of Ghent, Duns Scotus, and William OckhamOxford University Press. 2012.This book examines the central ideas that defined the debate about divine production in the Trinity in the late 13th and early 14th centuries, namely those of Henry of Ghent, John Duns Scotus, and William Ockham. Their discussions are significant for the history of trinitarian theology and the history of philosophy.
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182In this paper, I examine how Scotus and Ockham try to solve the following problem. If different kinds of constituents contribute some difference in kind to the things they constitute, then the divine Father and Son should be different in kind because they are constituted by at least some constituents that are different in kind (namely, fatherhood and sonship). However, if the Father and Son are different in kind, the Son's production will be equivocal, and equivocal products are typically less p…Read more
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50The Routledge Companion to Medieval Philosophy (edited book)Routledge. 2016.Like any other group of philosophers, scholastic thinkers from the Middle Ages disagreed about even the most fundamental of concepts. With their characteristic style of rigorous semantic and logical analysis, they produced a wide variety of diverse theories about a huge number of topics. The Routledge Companion to Medieval Philosophy offers readers an outstanding survey of many of these diverse theories, on a wide array of subjects. Its 35 chapters, all written exclusively for this Companion by…Read more
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