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         Philosophy Medieval:     more books (100)
  1. La Filosofia De La Edad Media/ the Philosophy of Medieval Times by Etienne Gilson, 2007-05-18
  2. A HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY by Copleston. F. C., 1972
  3. The Philosophy of Peter Abelard by John Marenbon, 1999-09-28
  4. Dissent and Philosophy in the Middle Ages: Dante and His Precursors (Applications of Political Theory) by Ernest L. Fortin, 2002-09-15
  5. Medieval Philosophy: Selected Readings from Augustine to Buridan by Herman Shapiro, 1964
  6. History of Philosophy, Volume 1 (History of Philosophy) by Frederick Copleston, 1993-03-01
  7. Logic and the Philosophy of Language (The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical Texts, Vol. 1)
  8. The Cambridge History of Medieval Political Thought c.350-c.1450 (The Cambridge History of Political Thought)
  9. Medieval Philosophy by Armand A. Maurer, 1962
  10. Philosophies of Existence: Ancient and Medieval
  11. Quodlibetal Questions: Volumes 1 and 2, Quodlibets 1-7 (Yale Library of Medieval Philosophy Seri) by William of Ockham, 1998-05-25
  12. History of Philosophy, Volume 2 by Frederick Copleston, 1993-03-01
  13. Conscience in Medieval Philosophy
  14. Medieval Jewish Philosophy: An Introduction (Curzon Jewish Philosophy) by La Cohn-Sherbok, 1996-10-29

61. Wesleyan University - Medieval Studies Program
Interdisciplinary program for students who wish to study the European Middle Ages with a concentration in either art history and archaeology, history, language and literature, or philosophy and religion.
http://www.wesleyan.edu/medistud/
MEDIEVAL STUDIES PROGRAM Medieval Studies Home Page The Major Program Courses Honors ... Lectures
MEDIEVAL STUDIES PROGRAM
341 Science Center Fax: (860) 685-2089

The Medieval Studies Program provides an interdisciplinary context for students who wish to study the European Middle Ages. Students normally concentrate on one of four fields:
  • art history and archaeology history or language and literature
They are also expected to do course work in the other fields. In certain cases the program may also provide a framework for students wishing to cross the somewhat arbitrary temporal, topical, and geographical boundaries of medieval studies in order to consider such problems as relationship between classical and medieval literature or art or the broader history of the preindustrial European studies. send questions to: dsierpinski@wesleyan.edu Above image is from a photograph of the tile floor in the Abbot's Parlor (Abbey of Saint-Jean-des-Vignes, Soissons)

62. Adventures In Philosophy: A Brief History Of Medieval Philosophy
Histories of medieval philosophy tend to start with St. Augustine (354430), if not earlier, Introduction Christianity and medieval philosophy
http://radicalacademy.com/adiphilmedieval.htm
Adventures in Philosophy MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY Select a Category... Ancient Philosophy Medieval Philosophy Modern Philosophy Recent Philosophy American Philosophy Islamic Philosophy Jewish Philosophy Political Philosophy Eastern Philosophy Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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for Powell's Books FREE newsletter and you may win $100 worth of books. TABLE OF CONTENTS Histories of medieval philosophy tend to start with St. Augustine (354-430), if not earlier, but Augustine was of the late Roman Empire, centuries before the Middle Ages, and is included in such works not because he was a medieval thinker but because he cast such a long shadow across medieval philosophy. For our purposes here, we will go back further than Augustine's time and consider medieval philosophy to begin as ancient Greek philosophy withers into the distance.

63. Protestant Ecclesiology & Epistemology Is Always Ultimately Self-Defeating
European medieval and Renaissance Culture, Art, Architecture, History, philosophy, Science, Religion
http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ33.HTM#Science and Learning/
Protestant Ecclesiology and Epistemology is Always Ultimately Self-Defeating Now Located at: http://web.archive.org/web/20040202001146/http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ33.HTM Main Index Super-Link Search Page My Books Page ... Protestantism Uploaded by Dave Armstrong on 20 January 2004 from previous materials: 15 September 2003 and 18 December 2003.

64. The Philosophy Resource Center: Medieval Philosophy
Essay Christianity and medieval philosophy (on site); The Pefecting of philosophy in medieval Times (on site); Texts and Archives of Scholasticism
http://radicalacademy.com/studentrefphil3.htm
Philosophy Resource Center Resources: Medieval Philosophy Select a Feature... Philosophy Main Page General Resources Philosophy Glossary Resources: Ancient Philosophy Resources: Medieval Philosophy Resources: Modern Philosophy Resources: Recent Philosophy Philosophical Quotations Philosophical Issues Philosophy Mini-Courses Philosophy Resource Center Main Page Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy Diagram: ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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for Powell's Books FREE newsletter and you may win $100 worth of books. PHILOSOPHY RESOURCES Augustianism

65. CAMDEN BOOKS: Antiquarian, Rare And Scholarly Books In Bath, United Kingdom - In
Deals in antiquarian, rare and scholarly books in architecture, civil engineering, economics, philosophy, physics and mathematics, classical, medieval and Byzantine studies and history of art.
http://www.camdenbooks.com/
Camden Books. Camden Books was established in 1984 by Victor and Elizabeth Suchar and it is located in the World Heritage City of Bath.
CAMDEN BOOKS
146 Walcot Street Bath BA1 5BL UK
E-Mail/Order:- suchcam@msn.com

66. Philosophy Department Faculty
philosophy of Religion, medieval philosophy, philosophy of Literature. Arthur Madigan, SJ (Ph.D., University of Toronto). Greek philosophy, especially Plato
http://fmwww.bc.edu/pl/faculty.html
Search Philosophy BC Sites
Philosophy Department Home
Faculty Graduate Program Undergraduate Program ... Boston College Information
Faculty Full Time Ronald Anderson, S.J. (Ph.D., University of Melbourne; Ph.D., Boston University). Philosophy of Science, History of Science, Science and Religion. James Bernauer, S.J. (Ph.D., S.U.N.Y. at Stony Brook). Philosophies of Foucault and Arendt, Social Philosophy. Oliva Blanchette Patrick Byrne (Ph.D., S.U.N.Y. at Stony Brook). Philosophy of Science, Lonergan Studies, Social Ethics, Aristotle. John Cleary (Ph.D., Boston University). Ancient Philosophy, Philosophy of Science. Richard Cobb-Stevens (Ph.D., University of Paris). Phenomenology, Contemporary French Philosophy, American Philosophy. Joseph Flanagan, S.J. (Ph.D., Fordham University). Aesthetics, Lonergan Studies. Jorge L.A.Garcia (Ph.D. Yale University) Ethics Gary Gurtler, S.J. (Ph.D., Fordham University). Ancient philosophy, Aesthetics Richard Kearney (Ph.D., University of Paris).The Charles Seelig Professor in Philosophy

67. Antiquarian And Rare Books
Sellers of antiquarian, secondhand, out of print and remainder books on the Humanities, including Early Printing, Classical, and medieval studies, History, philosophy and Social Science, Literature and the Arts.
http://www.unsworths.com/
Visit Us
Opposite the British Library
101, Euston Road
London NW1 2RA
Mon-Sat 10.00- 6.30
Books Bought
books@unsworths.com
Academic and Literary, Antiquarian and Rare, Out of Print and Remainder, Reprint, New and Used Books for the Scholar, Reader and Collector

68. Powell's Bookstores Chicago
Used, rare and outof-print bookstore near the University of Chicago. Scholarly books especially classics, archaeology, philosophy, medieval history, art, architecture and Photography.
http://www.powellschicago.com/
Welcome to Powell's Bookstores Chicago
STORES CATALOGUES REPRINTS CONTACT US ... BUYERS Powell's Bookstores Chicago specializes in quality used, rare, and discounted books, primarily academic and scholarly. We are particularly strong in medieval studies and classics, philosophy and books on books, but we also carry many other subjects. We have three retail locations in Chicago, each with well over a quarter million books. We also publish catalogues in several subjects, such as medieval studies, classics, etc. For subjects in which we do not have a catalogue available, please search our stock at Abebooks . We are not equipped to search for titles not listed on ABE or in our catalogues. Our wholesale division sells scholarly and academic remainders to other bookstores, primarily from university presses. We are also the exclusive North American distributor for a series of reprints from Oxford University Press in subjects such as philosophy, ancient history and classics, and medieval studies. These reprints are available to customers as well through our catalogue department. Thanks for stopping by, and please check back again as we are adding new things to this site. We hope to see you soon in one of our stores or hear from you about our online books.

69. Jacques Maritain Center: St. Thomas Aquinas And Medieval Philosophy
St. Thomas Aquinas and medieval philosophy. By DJ Kennedy, OP. The Encyclopedia Press, Inc. 23 East FortyFirst Street New York
http://www.nd.edu/Departments/Maritain/etext/staamp0.htm
Jacques Maritain Center
St. Thomas Aquinas and Medieval Philosophy
By D.J. Kennedy, O.P. The Encyclopedia Press, Inc.
23 East Forty-First Street
New York
Chapter I: The Rise of Scholasticism St. Anselm (1034-1109)
Bibliography

70. Jacques Maritain Center: St. Thomas Aquinas And Medieval Philosophy: I
The study of Scholastic philosophy and the use of philosophical knowledge in (D) The decline of Scholasticism, and the philosophy of the Renaissance.
http://www.nd.edu/Departments/Maritain/etext/staamp1.htm
Jacques Maritain Center
The Rise of Scholasticism St. Anselm (1034-1109)
Much attention has been given, especially in recent times, to questions relating to evolution. This is a very broad subject, including in its various aspects many theories and discussions concerning the origin and development of all forms of created being and life. Naturally inquisitive and studious, man attempts to explain the nature of all things that come under his observation, and becomes deeply interested in the study of their origin and development, whether the subject of his investigation be the oak springing from the acorn, the visible world created by Almighty God, or the human soul, created also by God, and gradually developing its faculties until man reaches the highest perfection attainable world. Some persons think that the most important study in evolution is offered by the visible world in which we live. The story of the Creation comes to us in an inspired book, commanding all the attention and respect due to any book of which God is the author. But, were it possible to abstract from the fact that faith and revelation are necessarily involved when we consider the origin and evolution of the universe, it is certain that more attention should be given to the history of the mind than to the history of the material beings of our visible world. Have men been so blinded by prejudice that they lose sight of the superiority of mind over matter? It is scarcely credible that intelligent men are willing to assert that the remarkable engineering feats, the elegant trains lighted by electricity, the automobiles and airships of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries are sufficient indications of progress and perfection to settle the question of superiority. The men of the thirteenth century deserve more credit for one beautiful Gothic cathedral than we are entitled to claim for all our automobiles and airships, and when we consider the development of man's mind and his progress in the art of knowing, any candid observer must admit that we have much to learn from the much-abused Middle Ages. The experimental sciences will be more fully considered in a subsequent chapter (

71. Rivendell Is Moving
Athenian philosophers, antique and medieval philosophers, rationalists, and modern philosophers, from the rivendell educational archive by Leigh Denault.
http://www.watson.org/rivendell/philosophy.html
Rivendell Educational Archive has moved its resources ...
Some of the sections have been taken offline because they no longer provide useful information, while others have been updated, expanded, and moved to separate sites.
The following sections have been moved:

72. Medieval Theories Of Modality
Article at the Stanford Encyclopaedia of philosophy.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/modality-medieval/
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Medieval Theories of Modality
1. Aspects of Ancient Modal Paradigms
In speaking about the general features of the universe, ancient philosophers were inclined to think that all generic possibilities will be actualized, a habit of thinking called the principle of plenitude by Arthur O. Lovejoy (1936). Correspondingly, it was natural for them to think that the types of things which never occur are impossible and that the invariant structures of reality are necessary. This line of thought is found, e.g., in Plato's doctrine of ideas which are exhaustively imitated in the Receptacle, in Aristotle's theory of the priority of actuality over potentiality, in the Stoic doctrine of God, the world-order, and the eternal cosmic cycle, and in Plotinus's metaphysics of emanation (Knuuttila 1993). Even though Aristotle did not define modal terms with the help of extensional notions, this model can be found in his discussion of eternal beings, the natures of things, the types of events, or generic statements about such things. Modal terms refer to the one and only world of ours and classify the types of things and events on the basis of their occurrence. This paradigm suggests that actualization is the general criterion of the genuineness of possibilities, but the deterministic implications of this view compelled Aristotle to seek ways of speaking about unrealized singular possibilities. Diodorus Chronus (fl. 300 B.C.) was a determinist who found no problem in this way of thinking. (For different interpretations and evaluations of the role of this model in Aristotle, see Hintikka 1973, Sorabji 1980, Seel 1982, Waterlow 1982a, White 1985, van Rijen 1989, Gaskin 1995.) In

73. PHIL252, PHIL360
PHIL252 medieval philosophy PHIL360 Later medieval philosophy pages formerly used in these courses go to Teaching materials on medieval philosophy.
http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/0pge5260.html
Macquarie University
PHIL252: Medieval Philosophy
PHIL360: Later Medieval Philosophy
These courses have now been withdrawn. For the pages formerly used in these courses go to Teaching materials on Medieval Philosophy. Links to related pages Ockham, Scotus, Buridan
Medieval Logic and Philosophy
(very useful; includes email addresses of people working in the field and URLs of other sites; also translations and course materials)
Australian National University Philosophy page

American Philosophical Association

Labyrinth (Medieval Studies)
Return to Macquarie University Web servers First version: 18 August 1995
Last updated: November 1999 john.kilcullen@mq.edu.au.

74. Sophismata
Article on this common form of medieval philosophical writing, by John Longeway. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of philosophy.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sophismata/
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Sophismata
sophisma sophisma is an ambiguous, puzzling or simply difficult sentence that has to be solved. As an important element of scholarly training in universities, closely related to different kinds of disputations, the sophismata not only served to illustrate a theory but, from a more theoretical point of view, were also used to test the limits of a theory. The so-called sophismata -literature assumed more and more importance during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, and it is not an exaggeration to claim that many important developments in philosophy (mainly in logic and natural philosophy) appeared in texts of this kind, where masters could feel free to investigate problems and develop their own views, much more than they could in more academic and strictly codified literary genres.

75. 20th WCP: Medieval Philosophy
The Paideia Project Proceedings of the 20th World Congress of philosophy. Archive of contributed papers in the subject area of medieval philosophy.
http://www.bu.edu/wcp/MainMedi.htm
Medieval Philosophy The papers indexed below were given at the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy, in Boston, Massachusetts from August 10-15, 1998. Additional papers may be added to this section as electronic versions are aquired and formatted for the archive. These papers will be listed for a period of time at the What's New? page. Regarding browser support: The papers published in The Paideia Archive please contact the project's webmaster and provide details of the difficulty.
In addition to browsing the numerous subject indexes, you may also enter a name or subject keyword in the space below and hit the search button. Medieval Philosophy Author's Name Affiliation Paper Title Peter Adamson University of Notre Dame Johannes Brachtendorf Self-knowledge and the Sciences in Augustine's Early Thinking Darien C. DeBolt University of Oklahoma George Gemistos Plethon on God: Heterodoxy in Defense of Orthodoxy Victoria Erhart Catholic University of America The Context and Contents of Priscianus of Lydia's Solutionum ad Chosroem Sharon Kaye Dalhousie University Russell, Strawson, and William of Ockham

76. Johannes Sharpe
medieval scholar, prominent among the later Oxford Realists. Article from the Stanford Encyclopedia of philosophy, by Alessandro Conti.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sharpe/
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Johannes Sharpe
1. Life and Works
lector ordinarius He established a reputation as a philosopher and a theologian. The number of extant manuscripts of his works and their widespread distribution attest to his importance and notoriety throughout the 15 th century. The following writings are attributed to him:
  • a treatise on universals ( Quaestio super universalia QsU ] his only edited work); a commentary by questions on Aristotle's On the Soul Quaestio super libros De anima In De anima ] 8 mss.; all references are to the ms. Oxford, New College 238); a commentary by questions on Aristotle's On Physics Quaestio super libros Physicorum 7 mss.);

77. Thomas Of Erfurt
Life and work of this Modist medieval philosopher, by Jack Zupko. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of philosophy.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/erfurt/
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Thomas of Erfurt
Thomas of Erfurt was the most influential member of a group of later medieval philosophers known as the speculative grammarians or Modistae (Modists), after the central place they assigned to the modi significandi (modes of signification) of a word in the analysis of human discourse. The notion that a word, once it has been imposed to signify, carries with it all of its syntactical modes, or possible combinations with other words, had been around since the 12 th century. What the Modistae did was to explain the origins of the modi significandi in terms of parallel theories of modi intelligendi (modes of understanding) and modi essendi (modes of being). The result was a curious amalgam of philosophy, grammar, and linguistics. Thomas of Erfurt's

78. Rachel Lee Rare Books & Herb Tandree Philosophy Books - Second Hand Philosophy B
We medieval philosophy will search for scarce and outof-print titles in our field, and we are able to build and offer collections of books in our field,
http://www.thoemmes-antiquarian.com/
Thoemmes Antiquarian Books - Second hand philosophy books, Philosophy of religion, Ancient classical philosophy, Medieval philosophy
Thoemmes Antiquarian Books was established in 1979, and specialises in antiquarian and second-hand books on philosophy, the history of ideas, and related subjects.
second hand philosophy books, used philosophy books, british philosophy, continental philosophy, american philosophy, german philosophy, british idealism, philosophy of science, books on logic, history of philosophy, eighteenth century philosophy, antiquarian philosophy books, rare books, history of ideas, philosophy of religion, ancient classical philosophy, medieval philosophy

79. Medieval Philosophy Texts Online -- Ziniewicz
medieval philosophy Online Texts. General Sites The Internet medieval Sourcebook Online Reference Book for medieval Studies
http://www.fred.net/tzaka/medvtxt.html
Medieval Philosophy
Online Texts
General Sites
Anselm of Canterbury
Augustine 354 - 430
Thomas Aquinas

80. MSN Encarta - Philosophy, Medieval
philosophy, medieval, philosophy of the Middle Ages. Find more about philosophy, medieval from Search Encarta for philosophy, medieval
http://uk.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_781534950/Philosophy_Medieval.html
  • MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Search ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta
    Subscription Article MSN Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 35,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, thesaurus, study centre, and more for £19.99/year. Learn more. The article is exclusively available for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Philosophy, Medieval I. Introduction Philosophy, Medieval , philosophy of the Middle Ages. The subject is hard to characterize precisely for two main reasons. First, the term “medieval” is... II. The Medieval Philosophers III. The Main Themes Related Items Abelard, Peter Albertus Magnus, St 26 items Multimedia 3 items Sidebars
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