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Duns Scotus : philosophical writings / John Duns Scotus, Allan B. Wolter.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Duns Scotus, John, approximately 1266-1308, author.
Wolter, Allan B., author.
Series:
Nelson's philosophical texts
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Metaphysics.
Knowledge, Theory of.
Soul.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xxiii, 198 pages).
Other Title:
Duns Scotus
Place of Publication:
Edinburgh : Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1962.
Summary:
In a volume of the present size, a compiler can give a broader if somewhat piecemeal view of a man's philosophy by limiting the length of the selections, or he may sacrifice comprehensiveness of subject matter in the interests of revealing his thinker at work. I have chosen the latter alternative, building the present selection around five key questions concerned with God and the human soul, the two philosophical topics of greatest interest to an ex professo theologian like Duns Scotus. Following the Avicennian interpretation of Aristotelian metaphysics, like Albertus Magnus, Siger of Brabant, Aquinas and most scholastics of his day, Scotus envisioned God as the goal of any rational metaphysic whose subject is being qua being. The two selections dealing with the existence and unicity of God, then, form the core of his "first philosophy". They are introduced by a few short sections in which Scotus describes this "transcendental science" and the type of conclusion it purports to establish, followed by a question wherein the Subtle Doctor analyzes his philosophical concept of God in terms of his controversial thesis regarding the univocity of being. Of the two questions about the human soul, one touches on its spirituality and immortality, the other concerns its ability to attain certain knowledge.
Contents:
Concerning metaphysics
Man's natural knowledge of God
The existence of God
The unicity of God. Concerning human knowledge
The spirituality and immortality of the human soul.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

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