Fr. 76.00

Cognitive Issues in the Long Scotist Tradition

English · Hardback

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Description

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The late-scholastic school of Scotism (after John Duns Scotus, 1308) left considerable room for disagreement. This volume innovatively demonstrates just how vividly Scotist philosophers and theologians discussed cognitive matters from the 14th until the 17th century. It further shows how the Scotist ideas were received in Protestant and Reformed milieus.

About the author

Daniel Heider is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of South Bohemia. Among his many publications on metaphysics and epistemology in Post-Medieval / Early Modern scholasticism are his monographs Universals in Second Scholasticism (2014) and Aristotelian Subjectivism: Francisco Suárez’s Philosophy of Perception (2021).

Claus A. Andersen is currently Postdoc at the Université catholique de Louvain; from 2019 to 2022, he was Postdoc at the University of South Bohemia. He specializes in Late Scholastic thought and is author of the monograph Metaphysik im Barockscotismus (2016) and co-editor of Pere Daguí, Tractatus formalitatum brevis, Tractatus de differentia (2018).

Summary

The late-scholastic school of Scotism (after John Duns Scotus, † 1308) left considerable room for disagreement. This volume innovatively demonstrates just how vividly Scotist philosophers and theologians discussed cognitive matters from the 14th until the 17th century. It further shows how the Scotist ideas were received in Protestant and Reformed milieus.

Foreword

400 years of  scotistic discussion on cognition

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