Results for 'Alfred J. Freddoso'

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  1.  27
    John Buridan on Self-Reference: Chapter Eight of Buridan's Sophismata.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1986 - Noûs 20 (1):77-81.
  2.  43
    The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy: From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism, 1100-1600.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1984 - Journal of Philosophy 81 (3):150-156.
    This 1982 book is a history of the great age of scholastism from Abelard to the rejection of Aristotelianism in the Renaissance, combining the highest standards of medieval scholarship with a respect for the interests and insights of contemporary philosophers, particularly those working in the analytic tradition. The volume follows on chronologically from The Cambridge History of Later Greek and Early Medieval Philosophy, though it does not continue the histories of Greek and Islamic philosophy but concentrates on the Latin Christian (...)
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  3.  32
    O-propositions and Ockham's theory of supposition.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1979 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 20 (4):741-750.
  4. God's general concurrence with secondary causes: Why conservation is not enough.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1991 - Philosophical Perspectives 5:553-585.
    After an exposition of some key concepts in scholastic ontology, this paper examines four arguments presented by Francisco Suarez for the thesis, commonly held by Christian Aristotelians, that God's causal contribution to effects occurring in the ordinary course of nature goes beyond His merely conserving created substances along with their active and passive causal powers. The postulation of a further causal contribution, known as God's general concurrence (or general concourse), can be viewed as an attempt to accommodate an element of (...)
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  5. Accidental necessity and logical determinism.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy 80 (5):257-278.
    This paper attempts to construct a systematic and plausible account of the necessity of the past. The account proposed is meant to explicate the central ockhamistic thesis of the primacy of the pure present and to vindicate Ockham's own non-Aristotelian response to the challenge of logical determinism.
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  6. Medieval Aristotelianism and the Case against Secondary Causation in Nature.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1988 - In Thomas V. Morris (ed.), Divine and Human Action: Essays in the Metaphysics of Theism. Cornell Up. pp. 74-118.
    Central to the western theistic understanding of divine providence is the conviction that God is the sovereign Lord of nature. He created the physical universe and continually conserves it in existence. What's more, He is always and everywhere active in it by His power. The operations of nature, be they minute or catastrophic, commonplace or unprecedented, are the work of His hands, and without His constant causal influence none of them would or could occur.
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  7. God’s General Concurrence with Secondary Causes: Pitfalls and Prospects.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1994 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 68 (2):131-156.
    My topic is God's activity in the ordinary course of nature. The precise mode of this activity has been the subject of prolonged debates within every major theistic intellectual tradition, though it is within the Catholic tradition that the discussion has been carried on with the most philosophical sophistication. The problem, in its simplest form, is this: Given the fundamental theistic tenet that God is the provident Lord of nature, the First Efficient Cause who creates the universe, sustains it in (...)
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  8.  22
    The Existence and Nature of God.Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.) - 1983 - Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press.
    These original essays offer evidence that a growing number of Anglo-American philosophers are finding in the classical discussion of God's existence and nature fertile sources for critical reflection on issues in the philosophy of religion. Nelson Pike challenges Aquinas' claim that God is not responsible for evil and shows how the rejection of this claim bears on the problem of evil. Richard Swinburne defends the classical Christian understanding of heaven and hell, arguing that it is both philosophically plausible and compatible (...)
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  9.  43
    God’s General Concurrence with Secondary Causes.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1994 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 68 (2):131-156.
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  10. On Divine Foreknowledge: Part IV of the Concordia.Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.) - 1988 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Luis de Molina was a leading figure in the remarkable sixteenth-century revival of Scholasticism on the Iberian peninsula.
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  11. Human Nature, Potency and the Incarnation.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1986 - Faith and Philosophy 3 (1):27-53.
    According to the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation, the Son of God is truly but only contingently a human being. But is it also the case that Christ’s individual human nature is only contingently united to a divine person? The affirmative answer to this question, explicitly espoused by Duns Scotus and William of Ockham, turns out to be philosophically untenable, while the negative answer, which is arguably implicit in St. Thomas Aquinas, explication of the Incarnation, has some surprising and significant (...)
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  12. The Necessity of Nature.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1986 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 11 (1):215-242.
    This paper lays out the main contours of an objectivistic account of natural necessity that locates its source within natural substances themselves. The key claims are that what occurs by a necessity of nature constitutes the culmination of deterministic natural tendencies and that these tendencies are themselves rooted in the natures or essences of natural substances. The paper concludes by discussing the notion of a law of nature as it emerges on this account.
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  13.  90
    Abailard on collective realism.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1978 - Journal of Philosophy 75 (10):527-538.
    In the Logica Ingredientibus Abailard attacks the theory according to which universals are collections of individuals. This paper argues that Abailard's principal objection to this 'collective realism', viz, that it conflates universals with integral wholes, is actually quite strong, though it is generally overlooked by recent commentators. For implicit in this objection is the claim that the collective realist cannot provide a satisfactory account of predication. The reason for this is that integral wholes are not uniquely decomposable. In support of (...)
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  14.  55
    ``Accidental Necessity and Power Over the Past".Alfred J. Freddoso - 1982 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 63 (1):54-68.
    The thesis of this paper is that an agent S has the power to bring it about that a proposition p is or will be true at a moment t only if S has at the same time the power to bring it about that it has always been the case that p would be true at t. The author first constructs a prima facie compelling argument for logical determinism and then argues that whoever accepts an Ockhamistic response to that (...)
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  15.  62
    Logic, Ontology and Ockham’s Christology.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1983 - New Scholasticism 57 (3):293-330.
    Let me begin somewhat perversely by making clear what I do not intend to do in this paper. I do not propose to offer a general defense of Ockham's resolution of the metaphysical perplexities engendered by the dogma of the Incarnation. In fact, I have argued elsewhere that his account of the hypostatic union is seriously deficient. 1..
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  16.  33
    Ockham's Theory of Truth Conditions.Alfred J. Freddoso, William of Ockham & Henry Schuurman - 1984 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 49 (1):306-308.
  17.  62
    William of ockham.Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    Born in England and educated at Oxford, Ockham was the preeminent Franciscan thinker of the mid-fourteenth century. Because of his role in the bitter dispute between the Franciscans and Pope John XXII over evangelical poverty, he was excommunicated in 1328. After that he abandoned philosophy and theology proper, producing instead a series of political tracts on the ecclesiastical and secular power of the papacy.
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  18. Maximal Power.Thomas P. Flint & Alfred J. Freddoso - 1983 - In Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.), The Existence and Nature of God. University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 81--114.
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  19.  11
    No Room at the Inn: Contemporary Philosophy of Mind Meets Thomistic Philosophical Anthropology.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2015 - Acta Philosophica 24 (1):15-30.
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  20. Good News, Your Soul Hasn’t Died Quite Yet.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2001 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 75:79-96.
    In this paper, I observe that Hobbesian physicalism on the one side, and Cartesian dualism on the other, have had a widespread cultural influence on the way we regard ourselves and on the way we behave toward one another. I argue that what we now need is a conceptual space within which we might forge a metaphysical alternative, an alternative that will give us some hope of overcoming the deleterious intellectual, moral, and social consequences of both physicalism and dualism.
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  21.  15
    Abstract of Comments: Ockham and the Word made Flesh.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1982 - Noûs 16 (1):76 - 77.
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  22.  53
    Christian faith as a way of life.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2004 - In William Mann (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Religion. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 172–197.
  23.  93
    Fides et Ratio: A 'Radical' Vision of Intellectual Inquiry.Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    Commentators on Pope John Paul II's encyclical Fides et Ratio(1) have not failed to notice the incongruity that envelops the Pope's defense of the powers of reason against contemporary forms of skepticism. As Nicholas Wolterstorff has put it: "How surprising and ironic that roughly two centuries after Voltaire and his cohorts mocked the church as the bastion of irrationality, the church, in the person of the pope, should be the one to put in a good word for reason." (2) In (...)
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  24.  38
    Fides et ratio.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2005 - Studia Neoaristotelica 2 (2):226-238.
  25.  10
    Fides et ratio.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2005 - Studia Neoaristotelica 2 (2):226-238.
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  26.  4
    Good News, Your Soul Hasn’t Died Quite Yet.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2001 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 75:79-96.
    In this paper, I observe that Hobbesian physicalism on the one side, and Cartesian dualism on the other, have had a widespread cultural influence on the way we regard ourselves and on the way we behave toward one another. I argue that what we now need is a conceptual space within which we might forge a metaphysical alternative, an alternative that will give us some hope of overcoming the deleterious intellectual, moral, and social consequences of both physicalism and dualism.
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  27.  18
    On Being a Catholic University: Some Thoughts On Our Present Predicament.Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    At a poignant juncture early in Brideshead Revisited, Sebastian, after briefly recounting for Charles his family's rather checkered performance with regard to its Catholicism, remarks, "I wish I liked Catholics more." When Charles replies, "They seem just like other people," Sebastian rebukes him: "My dear Charles, that's exactly what they're not ... It's not just that they're a clique-- as a matter of fact, they're at least four cliques all blackguarding each other half the time--but they've got an entirely different (...)
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  28.  59
    14 Ockham on Faith and Reason.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1999 - In P. V. Spade (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Ockham. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 326.
  29.  75
    Ontological Reductionism and Faith Versus Reason: A Critique of Adams on Ockham.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1991 - Faith and Philosophy 8 (3):317-339.
    The purpose of this essay is to take issue with two aspects of Marilyn Adams's monumental work William Ockham . Part I deals with Ockham's ontology, arguing (i) that Adams does not sufficiently appreciate the use Ockham makes of the prinicple of ontological parsimony in his attempt to refute the thesis that there are extramental universals or common natures and (ii) that she sets an implausibly high standard of success for Ockham's project of showing that the only singular entities are (...)
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  30.  64
    Ontological Reductionism and Faith Versus Reason.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1991 - Faith and Philosophy 8 (3):317-339.
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  31.  11
    Quodlibetal Questions: Volumes 1 and 2, Quodlibets 1-7.Alfred J. Freddoso & Francis E. Kelley (eds.) - 1991 - Yale University Press.
    This book offers the first English translation of the Quodlibetal Questions of William of Ockham --reflections on a variety of topics in logic, ontology, natural philosophy, philosophical psychology, moral theory, and theology by one of the preeminent thinkers of the Middle Ages. It is based on the recent critical edition of Ockham's theological and philosophical works.
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  32.  12
    Character, Choice, and Harry Potter.Alfred J. Freddoso, Catherine Jack Deavel, Mark Wynn & John Haldane - 2002 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 5 (4):49-64.
  33.  8
    Character, Choice, and Harry Potter.Alfred J. Freddoso, Catherine Jack Deavel, Mark Wynn & John Haldane - 2002 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 5 (4):49-64.
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  34. The Existence and Nature of God.Alfred J. Freddoso - 1984 - Religious Studies 20 (4):682-685.
     
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  35.  6
    Treatise on Human Nature: The Complete Text.Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.) - 2010 - St. Augustine's Press.
    "This is the only free-standing English translation of the entire Treatise on human nature, which includes St. Thomas's account of the metaphysical status of the human soul and its relation to the human organism ; the powers of the soul, especially the higher intellective powers that distinguish humans from other animals ; and, those questions on human origins, the creation of the first man and first woman, and their status as being created in the image of God."--Cover, p. 1.
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  36.  17
    Two Roles for Catholic Philosophers.Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    In his treatise on justice St. Thomas points out that the virtue of filial piety (pietas), by which we render honor to our parents, fails to satisfy the proper definition of justice because we cannot fully repay our debt to them. The same holds true of the virtue of respectfulness (observantia), by which we render honor to our teachers and guides, all the more if they themselves are virtuous. Ralph McInerny has been teacher and guide to me, and a virtuous (...)
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  37.  15
    The Vindication of St. Thomas: Thomism and Contemporary Anglo-American Philosophy.Alfred J. Freddoso - 2016 - Nova et Vetera 14 (2):565-584.
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  38.  17
    Ockham's Theory of Propositions: Part II of the Summa Logicae.Late Scholastic and Humanist Theories of the Proposition.John Longeway, Alfred J. Freddoso, Henry Schuurman & Gabriel Nuchelmans - 1983 - Philosophical Review 92 (2):302.
  39.  12
    Maksymalna moc.Thomas P. Flint, Alfred J. Freddoso, Marcin Iwanicki & Joanna Klara Teske - 2023 - Roczniki Filozoficzne 71 (1):519-550.
    Autorzy argumentują, że Bóg może być zarówno wszechmocny, jak i wszechmocny, oraz że Bóg może być zarówno wszechmocny, jak i nieskazitelny. Proponują pięć warunków filozoficznej adekwatności dla koncepcji maksymalnej mocy i przedstawiają analizę, która spełnia wszystkie pięć warunków. Jak argumentują, analiza ta jest zarówno filozoficznie adekwatna, jak i teologicznie akceptowalna.
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  40.  23
    Review of John F. Kavanaugh, S.J., Who Count As Persons?: Human Identity and the Ethics of Killing. [REVIEW]Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    These are bleak days for moral theory in mainstream professional philosophy. At the heart of the matter lies our inability, within contemporary liberal democracies, to come to a consensus on the deep issue of what we are as human beings and where our true good lies. Because of this, any moral theory built on a rich view of human nature and of the good for human beings is automatically viewed with suspicion. And, in fact, there are few such theories around. (...)
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  41.  34
    God, Time, and Knowledge. [REVIEW]Alfred J. Freddoso - 1993 - Faith and Philosophy 10 (1):99-107.
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  42.  34
    Review of God, Time, and Knowledge by William Hasker (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1989), Faith and Philosophy 8 (1993): 99-107. [REVIEW]Alfred J. Freddoso - unknown
    This outstanding book, which incorporates but goes beyond Hasker's extensive previous work on the subject, is a genuinely pivotal contribution to the lively current debate over divine foreknowledge and human freedom. If you plan to plunge into this debate at any time in the foreseeable future, you will have to take account of God, Time, and Knowledge.
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  43.  50
    On Efficient Causality: Metaphysical Disputations 17, 18, and 19.Robert Pasnau, Francisco Suarez & Alfred J. Freddoso - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (4):533.
    A quick scan of the leading figures in western philosophy reveals that relatively few have made a name for themselves by defending intuitive, natural, and sensible positions. Aristotle is one, and perhaps Aquinas is another. Francisco Suarez, the sixteenth-century Spanish scholastic, would be a third. His invariable working procedure is to give copious consideration to the various ancient and medieval views, and then to find some sensible compromise position. But today Suarez can hardly claim to have a broad readership. Of (...)
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  44.  25
    On Divine Foreknowledge.John Martin Fischer, Luis De Molina & Alfred J. Freddoso - 1992 - Philosophical Review 101 (2):387.
  45.  3
    Der rechte Werkmeister: Martin Heidegger nach den "Schwarzen Heften".Alfred J. Noll - 2016 - Köln: PapyRossa Verlag.
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  46.  44
    Alfred J. Freddoso and Francis E. Kelley, translators, "William of Ockham: Quodlibetal Questions". [REVIEW]Stephen F. Brown - 1994 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 32 (3):493.
  47. Alfred J. Freddoso & Henry Schuurman : Ockham's Theory of Propositions. [REVIEW]W. L. Gombocz - 1982 - Philosophische Rundschau 29:304.
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  48.  13
    Alfred J. Freddoso, William of Ockham, Henry Schuurman, Ockham's Theory of Truth Conditions. [REVIEW]John Corcoran - 1984 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 49 (1):306-308.
  49.  13
    Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.). The Existence and Nature of God. Pp. viii + Igo. Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1983. $16.95. [REVIEW]Alan Millar - 1984 - Religious Studies 20 (4):682-685.
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  50. Language, Truth and Logic, 2nd ed.Alfred J. Ayer - 1946 - New York: Dover.
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