The nose, then, is part of the substance signified by snubness, but it is not part of the definition of the form of concavity. [...] The form is designated by the peculiarly Aristotelian expression as the element in the thing which is that thing's necessary and unchangeable Being, in contrast in the physical order to the matter and the composite (both of which are changeable), and in the logical order to the generic characteristics (which are not necessarily restricted to the species in question). [...] Albert writing his Commentary on the Sentences™ Adam of Buckfield's unedited Commentary on the Metaphysics also shows the influence of Averroes on this as on other points of doctrine.19 Even more striking, however, is the evidence of Averroes' interpretation in the Sapientiale of Thomas of York, which cites the Arabian philosopher at great length on the identity of form and quid- dity.20 15 J. Owe [...] For example, he says in one place that the definition of man does not include bones, sinew and flesh; only the parts of the form are parts of the definition.21 Again, the definition of man is the definition of the soul.22 When he writes in this way, Aristotle is by no means denying what he said in Book VI of the Metaphysics about sensible matter appearing in the natural philosopher's definition of [...] Of course it is not a question of the essence being composed of this particular form and this particular matter, for the individual, such as Socrates and Callias, is composed of these; but rather of form and matter in general, as soul and body make up the essence of the species man.
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- Includes bibliographical references and indexes
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- CaOOCEL
- Dewey Decimal Classification Number
- 189/.4
- Dewey Decimal Edition Number
- 20
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- B721
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- M36 1990eb
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- 1 electronic text (x, 496 p.)
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Table of Contents
- Contents 6
- Introduction 8
- Acknowledgments 10
- THOMAS AQUINAS 12
- 1. Form and Essence in the Philosophy of St. Thomas 14
- 2. St. Thomas and the Analogy of Genus 30
- 3. A Neglected Thomistic Text on the Foundation of Mathematics 44
- 4. St. Thomas and Eternal Truths 54
- 5. St. Thomas on the Sacred Name 'Tetragrammaton' 70
- 6. The Unity of a Science: St. Thomas and the Nominalists 82
- 7. St. Thomas and Historicity 106
- SIGER OF BRABANT 128
- 8. Esse and Essentia in the Metaphysics of Siger of Brabant 130
- 9. Between Reason and Faith: Siger of Brabant and Pomponazzi on the Magic Arts 148
- 10. Siger of Brabant on Fables and Falsehoods in Religion 174
- DIETRICH OF FREIBERG 186
- 11. The De Quiditatibus Entium of Dietrich of Freiberg and its Criticism of Thomistic Metaphysics 188
- HENRY OF HARCLAY 212
- 12. Henry of Harclay's Question on the Univocity of Being 214
- 13. Henry of Harclay's Questions on Immortality 240
- JOHN OF JANDUN 284
- 14. John of Jandun and the Divine Causality 286
- FRANCIS OF MEYRONNES 320
- 15. Francis of Meyronnes' Defense of Epistemological Realism 322
- 16. The Role of Infinity in the Thought of Francis of Meyronnes 344
- WILLIAM OF OCKHAM 372
- 17. The Role of Divine Ideas in the Theology of William of Ockham 374
- 18. Ockham on the Possibility of a Better World 394
- 19. Method in Ockham's Nominalism 414
- 20. William of Ockham on Language and Reality 434
- 21. Ockham's Razor and Chatton's Anti-Razor 442
- EPILOGUE 456
- 22. Some Aspects of Fourteenth-Century Philosophy 458
- 23. Medieval Philosophy and its Historians 472
- Recent Editions of Works of Authors Cited 492
- Index of Authors 494
- A 494
- B 494
- C 495
- D 495
- E 495
- F 495
- G 496
- H 496
- J 496
- K 497
- L 497
- M 497
- N 497
- O 497
- P 497
- R 498
- S 498
- T 498
- U 499
- V 499
- W 499
- Z 500
- Subject Index 502
- A 502
- B 502
- C 502
- D 503
- E 503
- F 503
- G 504
- H 504
- I 504
- K 504
- L 504
- M 505
- N 505
- O 505
- P 505
- Q 506
- R 506
- S 506
- T 506
- U 507
- V 507
- W 507