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         Medieval Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Eschatological Themes in Medieval Jewish Philosophy (Aquinas Lecture) by Arthur Hyman, 2002-03
  2. The Idea Of Development Of The Soul In Medieval Jewish Philosophy by Philip David Bookstaber, 2007-07-25
  3. Medieval Philosophy and the Classical Tradition: In Islam, Judaism and Christianity by John Inglis, 2002-02-14
  4. An Introduction to Scholastic Philosophy: Medieval and Modern: Scholasticism Old and New by Maurice DeWulf, 2003-05
  5. The Consolation of Philosophy: Revised Edition (Penguin Classics) by Ancius Boethius, 2000-05-01
  6. A New History of Western Philosophy: Complete Four Volume Set by Anthony Kenny, 2007-12-15
  7. A Greek Prose Reading Course for Post-beginners: Philosophy: Plato: Crito by Plato, 1997-07-01
  8. Avicenna and Medieval Muslim Philosophy (World of Philosophy) by Thomas Gaskill, 2006-08-15
  9. Philosophy and Civilization in the Middle Ages by Maurice DeWulf, 2005-08-01
  10. Aquinas, Ethics, and Philosophy of Religion: Metaphysics and Practice (Indiana Series in the Philosophy of Religion) by Thomas S. Hibbs, 2007-05
  11. Medieval Philosophy: Philosophi Classics Volume II by Walter Kaufmann, Forrest E. Baird, 1994
  12. Towards a Philosophy of Medieval Studies : The Etienne Gilson Series 9 by Joseph Owens, 1986
  13. A History of Ancient & Medieval Philosophy by Mayer Frederick, 1950
  14. The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity: A Sociohistorical Approach to Religious Transformation by James C. Russell, 1996-06-20

81. AllRefer.com - Medieval Philosophy (Philosophy, Terms And Concepts) - Encycloped
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete information on medieval philosophy, Philosophy, Terms And Concepts.
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82. Enlightenment: Objectivist Scholarship
medieval philosophy. Objectivism and Academe The Progress, The Politics, and The Promise Author Chris Sciabarra, Subject Aesthetics, American History,
http://enlightenment.supersaturated.com/essays/subjects/medievalphilosophy.html
Enlightenment is dedicated to the discovery, encouragement, publication, and advancement of rational scholars and scholarship focusing on or using the method of objectivity. This site currently publishes six million words of new original research and analysis, and a couple of essential classics too. search Enlightenment
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    medieval philosophy Objectivism and Academe: The Progress, The Politics, and The Promise
    Author: Chris Sciabarra , Subject: Aesthetics American History Ancient Philosophy Artificial Intelligence ... Self Esteem , Type: Commentary Online Conference , Size: 29 K, Date: 2001-2-15 Exam
    Author: Jamie Mellway , Subject: Medieval Philosophy , Type: Academic , Size: 29 K, Date: 2000-8-28 Know Thyself
    Author: Jamie Mellway , Subject: Medieval Philosophy , Type: Academic , Size: 30 K, Date: 2000-8-28 Augustine's Theory of Language and Dialectic
    Author: Jamie Mellway , Subject: Medieval Philosophy , Type: Book Reviews , Size: 32 K, Date: 2000-8-23 Connative Terms, Common Natures, and Intuitive and Abstract Cognition
  • 83. Medieval Philosophy Course Syllabus
    The importance of the study of medieval philosophy. Historical and historiographical aspects. Basic characteristics of medieval philosophy (Western vs.
    http://www.ceu.hu/medstud/old/sygereby.htm
    Syllabi of CEU Medieval Studies, 1995-96 first trimester
    Medieval Philosophy
    gerebyg@ceu.hu Research method, mandatory
    1. September 25, Monday, 11.00 - 12.30
    • The importance of the study of Medieval Philosophy.
    • Historical and historiographical aspects.
    • Basic characteristics of Medieval Philosophy (Western vs. Eastern, scholastic vs. monastic).
    • Periodisation and the phases of medieval thought.
    • Pride and prejudice in shaping the medieval legacy: humanism, reformation, enlightenment, neoscholasticism.
    • The famous philosophers and theologians.
    Literature A. de Libera: Penser au Moyen Age . Paris, 1994.
    Flasch, Kurt, Wozu erforschen wir die Philosophie des Mittelalters?
    2. September 28, Thursday, 9.00 - 10.30
    • The textual and doctrinal traditions in Medieval Philosophy.
    • Aristotle, Plato and Augustine.
    • The medieval world of learning.
    • Institutions and teaching.
    • Books and research methods.
    • Literary forms and genres.
    • Reason and society.
    Literature F. Van Steenberghen,
    Murray, Alexander, Reason and society in the Middle Ages . Oxford, 1978 (3rd ed. 1986).

    84. Medieval Philosophy: Term Paper Section At AcademicTermPapers.com
    Term papers include Utopia, Thomas More, Boethius, Augustine, Aquinas, Attitudes Toward Sexuality, Love And Transcendence In Classical Literature,
    http://www.academictermpapers.com/catpages/catl18b.html
    "MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY" Term Paper Section SUBJECT INDEX: ANTHROPOLOGY
    ARCHITECTURE

    ART

    BLACK STUDIES
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    AREA STUDIES

    30,000 Term Papers
    To Choose From.. Find Academic, Research, College, and University Term Papers Search Our Catalog For A Term Paper, Book Report, Case Study or Essay. We Provide Custom Research, Term Paper Writing, Pre-written Reports and Editing...
    "MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY" TERM PAPERS Academic Term Papers Catalog
    18B. MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY
    HOW TO INTERPRET THE CATALOG ENTRIES:
    • HOW OLD IS MY PAPER? The closer a paper is to the top of a page, the more recently it was written. BOOK REVIEWS: Underlined titles indicate that the paper is a review/summary of a book. PAGE LENGTHS, FOOTNOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHIC REFERENCES: The title of the paper, usually typed in capital letters, is followed by a brief description of the paper and a specification of text page length (NOT including the bibliography or endnote pages), number of footnotes or citations, and number of bibliographic references.
    MAIMONIDES ON THE COMMANDMENTS.

    85. Mid-West Seminar In Ancient And Medieval Philosophy
    MidWest Seminar in Ancient and medieval philosophy (3). I. Ibn Gabirol s Fons Vitae Doctrine and Sources (Papers already selected);
    http://www.umich.edu/~aos/MWMedievalStudies.html
    CALL FOR PAPERS
    Mid-West Seminar in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy (3): I.
    Ibn Gabirol's Fons Vitae: Doctrine and Sources (Papers already selected);
    Submissions for the following sessions welcome:
    II. al-Ghazali: Critical Philosopher, Esoteric Theologian (3 Papers); III. The Limits of Analogy (3 Papers)
    at The International Congress on Medieval Studies May 2 - 5, 2002 Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan
    Submit Abstracts (email preferred) to:
    Richard C. Taylor Philosophy Dept., Marquette University
    P.O. Box 1881
    Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881
    Phone:
    (wk) 414-288-5649
    FAX: E-Mail:
    Richard.Taylor@Marquette.edu

    86. Polity - Medieval Philosophy
    medieval philosophy. 1 titles are listed alphabetically by author. Select a publication title to view a full description and details.
    http://www.polity.co.uk/searchres.asp?subcode=2720&cat=RA&desc=Medieval Philosop

    87. HPS Medieval Philosophy Reading Group
    Discussion of medieval philosophy with relevance to science or philosophy of science.
    http://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/seminars/msprg.html

    88. Course Description For PHIL Philosophy 311-0: Studies In Medieval Philosophy Fal
    3110-20 Studies in medieval philosophy Maimonides . Instructor Kenneth Seeskin Office address Crowe Room 3-175 Phone 847-491-2560 E-mail
    http://aquavite.northwestern.edu/cdesc/course-desc.cgi?school_id=400&dept_id=439

    89. Medieval Academic Discussion Groups
    MDVLPHIL, devoted to medieval philosophy and sociopolitical issues, does not have many postings. MEDFEM-L is a fairly high-volume discussion group which
    http://www.towson.edu/~duncan/acalists.html
    MEDIEVAL ACADEMIC DISCUSSION GROUPS
    by Edwin Duncan Here is a listing of medieval academic discussion groups you may want to join along with the addresses of the listservers that carry them. Remember that if you are sending a message for the other subscribers to read, don't send it to the listserver but to the name of the network followed by the node address for the listserver. Thus, once you've already joined Ansax-l and want to send a message to its members, you will address it to ansax-l@wvnvm.wvnet.edu, not to listserv@wvnvm.wvnet.edu. Annotations for some of the networks appear in the paragraphs below the list. NETWORK: LISTSERVER ADDRESS: SUBJECT AREA: ANSAX-L is the discussion group for ANSAXNET, the Anglo-Saxon Network. It has over 600 members from fifteen or twenty different countries and, as one would expect from such a large membership, has a fairly high volume of mail. Discussions cover not only Old English language and literature, but also Anglo-Saxon archeology, history, philosophy, and the arts. As with other networks, one also runs across calls for papers, job listings, announcements of new journals, new computer services, and the like. ARTHURNET, a network devoted to all subjects relating to King Arthur and the knights of the round table, has apparently replaced an older and less successful one called CAMELOT, an English network.

    90. Early Medieval Philosophy 480-1150 - John Marenbon - Microsoft Reader EBook
    Early medieval philosophy 4801150 - John Marenbon - Microsoft Reader eBook - ClearType, advanced navigation, search, personal library, bookmarks, notes,
    http://www.ebookmall.com/ebook/76362-ebook.htm

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    Free eBooks With Every Order! eBook Summary: ...an outstandingly sure, lucid and astute guide. His book is compact but singularly well thought out, rigorous in discussion but easily comprehensible on...gives us a lucid account...He not only concerns himself with philosophical aspects...but strives to achieve a contextually correct vision of the period, conscious that much of the material he's called upon is not strictly philosophical but also theological, logical and poetic in nature Diaogo Filasofico Purchasing Instructions
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  • 91. Medieval Theories Of Analogy
    Entry in the Stanford Encyclopaedia of philosophy, by E. Jennifer Ashworth.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/analogy-medieval/
    version history
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    Medieval Theories of Analogy
    per prius et posterius ). A third type of analogy, sometimes used by theologians, appealed to a relation of likeness between God and creatures. Creatures are called good or just because their goodness or justice imitates or reflects the goodness or justice of God. This type of analogy was called the analogy of imitation or participation. Of the three types, it is the analogy of attribution that is central to medieval discussions. From the fourteenth century on discussions of analogy focused not so much on linguistic usages as on the nature of the concepts that corresponded to the words used. Is there just one concept that corresponds to an analogical term, or is there a sequence of concepts? If the latter, how are the members of the sequence ordered and related to each other? Moreover, how far should we distinguish between so-called formal concepts (or acts of mind) and objective concepts (whatever it is that is the object of the act of understanding)? These discussions were still influential at the time of Descartes.

    92. Bibliography On Medieval Jewish Philosophy
    List of published books in this field, sorted by topic.
    http://www.ucalgary.ca/~elsegal/RelS_365/MedPhilBibl.html
    Bibliography on Medieval Jewish Philosophy
    Topic Call No. Author / Editor Title City Publisher Date
    General Works
    General: Reference
    Encyclopedia Judaica New York Macmillan General: Bibliographical: Medieval BM40 .S78 V.2 Berman, Lawrence Bibliographical essays in medieval Jewish studies New York B'Nai B'rith. Anti-Defamation League General: Bibliographical Holtz, Barry Back to the Sources New York Summit General: Journal
    AJS Review Cambridge Mass.
    General: Journal
    Journal of Jewish Studies Oxford
    General: Journal
    Jewish Quarterly Review Philadelphia
    General: Journal BM11 .H42 V.35 1964
    Hebrew Union College Annual Cincinnati
    General: Journal
    Paris General: Journal Tradition New York General: Journal DS101 .P74 V.52 Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research General: Conference Proceedings Proceedings of the World Congress of Jewish Studies Jerusalem General: Journal: Bibliographical Reshimat ma'amarim be-mada'e ha-yahadut [Index of Articles in Jewish Studies] Jerusalem General: Journal: Bibliographical Index to Jewish periodicals Cleveland Heights General: Jewish Philosophy Guttmann, Julius

    93. Society For Medieval And Renaissance Philosophy
    Aims to foster research and teaching in the field, to organize scholarly meetings and conferences, to publish a newsletter and a monograph series, and to cooperate with other learned societies in projects of common interest.
    http://www.lmu.edu/smrp/
    Funding for the publication of scholarly works in medieval or Renaissance philosophy. To apply Annual award for the best paper on Medieval or Renaissance philosophy by a younger scholar. To apply The Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy was founded in December 1978 to foster research and teaching in the field, to organize scholarly meetings and conferences , to publish a newsletter and a monograph series , and to cooperate with other learned societies in projects of common interest. ANNOUNCEMENTS Reti Medievali
    Iniziative on line per gli studi medievistici
    Online Initiatives for Medieval Studies Reti Medievali was established in 1998 by a group of scholars from the Universities of Florence, Naples, Palermo, Venice, and Verona, and started online in May of 2000. In 2001 more scholars from other Italian universities joined the editorial board. Since 2004, the contributions of a group of Italian and foreign corresponding editors have extended the thematic and geographic range of our initiative. RM aims at establishing itself as an on-line community of medievalists, beyond specialist fields, and at encouraging institutions and individual scholars in experimenting and exploring, through a common action, the potential of new communication technologies.

    94. Karaism
    Article by Dr. Daniel Frank on the relationship between medieval Karaite philosophy and the Muslim kalaam.
    http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/ip/rep/J052.htm
    Karaism
    The Karaites ( qara'im , or benei miqra ) take their name from the Hebrew word for Scripture. The sect's scripturalism originated in its rejection of the 'Oral Law' embodied in rabbinic literature. Like earlier scripturalist groups - notably the Sadducees - Karaites sought to derive their practices directly from the biblical text. While Karaism is usually traced to mid-eighth-century Iraq, the early history remains murky. The sect crystallized in the Islamic East during the late ninth and early tenth centuries, calling forth stern reactions from the leaders of mainstream rabbinic Judaism. Although harsh at times, the ensuing polemics stimulated both Karaite and Rabbanite scholarship in the fields of biblical exegesis, Hebrew grammar and lexicography, jurisprudence and religious philosophy. The two groups differed sharply over points of law and practice - the calendar, dietary laws, Sabbath regulations - but typically concurred on questions of theology.
  • The Mu'tazilite phase The post-Maimonidean phase
  • 1. The Mu'tazilite phase
    Early medieval Jewish thinkers of both Rabbanite and Karaite persuasion found the kalam (speculative theology) of the Muslim rationalistic school known as the Mu'tazila congenial to their outlook and adopted many Mu'tazilite ideas (see Ash'ariyya and Mu'tazila ). The Mu'tazilites' uncompromising definitions of God's unity and justice inform the writings of leading Rabbanites like

    95. History Of Philosophy 29
    Short footnoted article on this medieval thinker and his place in history, summarizing four points of his doctrine.
    http://www.nd.edu/Departments/Maritain/etext/hop29.htm
    Jacques Maritain Center History of Philosophy / by William Turner
    CHAPTER XXIX
    ROSCELIN
    Life Novi Lycaei Conditor . He died about 1100. Sources . It appears that Roscelin did not commit his doctrines to writing, contenting himself with promulgating and defending them orally. There has come down to us, however, a letter addressed by him to Abelard dealing chiefly with Roscelin's Trinitarian doctrine. Apart from this document we have no sources of information except the statements of Anselm, Abelard , and John of Salisbury , who were Roscelin's opponents. Monograph: M. Picavet, Roscelin d'apres la legende et d'apres l'histoire (Paris, 1896). DOCTRINES From the sources mentioned in the preceding paragraph we derive the following points of doctrine: 1. Roscelin taught that universals are mere flatus vocis. Anselm says: "Illi utique nostri temporis dialectici, imo dialectice haeretici, qui nonnisi flatum vocis putant universales substantias. . . ." John of Salisbury refers the same opinion to Roscelin by name: "Alius ergo, consistit in vocibus, licet haec opinio cum Rucelino suo omnino jam evanuerit." From these passages we infer that Roscelin was a nominalist, although the expression

    96. LA MORRA - Ensemble For Late Medieval Music
    Rediscover variety of late medieval music with ensemble La Morra. Concert programs, recordings, and philosophy.
    http://www.lamorra.info/
    LA MORRA
    Ensemble for Late Medieval Music
    Michal Gondko and Corina Marti directors This web site contains official information about the Ensemble LA MORRA, its concert programs, philosophy and more. Visitors are welcome to listen to the sound samples of our performances under 'Jardin de Plaisance' section as well as to check out the most up-to-date news about the activities of LA MORRA (located under the news section). The site of LA MORRA is available in ENGLISH DEUTSCH ITALIANO contact@lamorra.info Enabling JavaScript and Frames required If not all frames were loaded, click Refresh or Reload button of your browser.

    97. NINO B. COCCHIARELLA
    Abstract of an article by Cocchiarella published in volume 4 of Logical Analysis and History of philosophy.
    http://www.pla.uni-bonn.de/EnglishPages/Schaufenster/Volume4Frames/NINOB.COCCHIA
    NINO B. COCCHIARELLA: A logical reconstruction of medieval terminist logic in conceptual realism

    98. Medieval Sourcebook: Ibn Rushd (Averroës) (1126-1198 CE): Religion & Philosophy
    A translation of On the Harmony of Religions and philosophy (in Arabic Kitab fasl almaqal ); written around 1190 CE by Ibn Rushd. Translated by Mohammed Jamil-al-Rahman.
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1190averroes.html
    Back to Medieval Source Book ORB Main Page Links to Other Medieval Sites Islamic History Sourcebook
    Medieval Sourcebook:
    Ibn Rushd (Averroës), 1126-1198 CE:
    This text is known in English as On the Harmony of Religions and Philosophy , in Arabic Kitab fasl al-maqal , with its appendix ( Damina ). Also appended is an extract from Kitab al-kashf`an manahij al-adilla Contents Introduction Hence, for a believer in the Law and a follower of it, it is necessary to know these things before he begins to look into creation, for they are like instruments for observation. For, just as a student discovers by the study of the law, the necessity of knowledge of legal reasoning with all its kinds and distinctions, a student will find out by observing the creation the necessity of metaphysical reasoning. Indeed, he has a greater claim on it than the jurist. For if a jurist argues the necessity of legal reasoning from the saying of God: "Wherefore take example from them O you who have eyes" [Qur'an 59.2], a student of divinity has a better right to establish the same from it on behalf of metaphysical reasoning.

    99. Philosophy And Theology
    On medieval Philosophers. From the Maritain Center at Notre Dame U Catholic Encyclopedia articles on Abelard Albertus Magnus Bonaventure Scotus and
    http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/philosophy/phil.html
    This page is no longer being maintained. Please visit labyrinth.georgetown.edu
    Philosophy and Theology
    Primary Texts
    Aristotle
    Aristotle's Works at The Tech Archive (MIT) Aristotle, Metaphysics (Trans. W. D. Ross) Aristotle De interpretatione (Trans. E. M. Edghill) Aristotle, On the Soul (Trans. J. A. Smith) and an html edition (prepared by James O'Donnell) Aristotle, Physics (Trans. R. P. Hardie and R. K. Gaye) Aristotle, Poetics (Trans. S. H. Butcher) Aristotle, Rhetoric (Trans. W. Rhys Roberts)
    Augustine
    Latin text of the Confessions (HTML edition by Chris Mitchell) Directory of the Confessions for access by individual book, or the Entire text as one long file. (E. B. Pusey, trans.) Key word search of the Pusey trans. Augustine, De dialectica . (Text and trans., James Marchand; HTML ed., James O'Donnell.) Enchiridion (Albert Outler, trans.) De musica (Latin ed.)
    Boethius
    Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English, at UVA Etext Center) Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English with commentary and other resources, ed. James O'Donnell, at U Penn.) De institutione musica (Latin ed.)

    100. DU Press Home
    Publishing in medieval studies, philosophy, psychology, and religion.
    http://www.dupress.duq.edu/
    New and Forthcoming Books Divine Subjection
    The Rhetoric of Sacramental Devotion in Early Modern England
    by: Gary Kuchar Combining theoretically engaged analyses with historically contextualized close readings, Divine Subjection posits new ways of understanding the relations between devotional literature and early modern English culture. More... ISBN 0-8207-0370-2 / Cloth / $58.00 Milton and the Rhetoric of Zeal
    by: Thomas Kranidas This study describes a rhetoric of radical excess that developed among the Puritan wing of English Protestantism throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and evolves into a comparison of the radical Puritan rhetoric and the rhetoric of the radical movement of the 1960s and the 1970s. More... ISBN 0-8207-0361-3 / Cloth / $58.00 Freud's Traumatic Memory
    Reclaiming Seduction Theory and Revisiting Oedipus by Mary Marcel By analyzing Freud's arguments, recovered memories from self-analysis and mis-use of classical sources, Marcel uncovers why Freud turned away from the seduction theory, misconstrued Oedipus, and was unable to cure his own neurosis. More...

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