Results for ' Univocity'

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  1.  29
    On univocal connectives.Rodolfo Ertola - 2009 - Logic and Logical Philosophy 18 (1):5-13.
    We pay attention to the concept of univocal connective. Considering the corresponding definition in the context of the sequent calculus a problem arises in a paper by Belnap. We provide an explanation by Belnap and finally give some examples and non-examples of univocal connectives.
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  2.  70
    Does Univocity Entail Idolatry?N. N. Trakakis - 2010 - Sophia 49 (4):535-555.
    Idolatry is vehemently rejected by the Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), and closely connected with idolatry are certain varieties of anthropomorphism, which involve the attribution of a human form or personality to God. The question investigated in this paper is whether a highly anthropomorphic conception of God, one that commits the sin of idolatry, is entailed by a particular theory of religious language. This theory is the 'univocity thesis', the view that, for some substitutions for 'F', the sense (...)
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  3. Univocity, Duality, and Ideal Genesis: Deleuze and Plato.John Bova & Paul M. Livingston - 2017 - In Abraham Jacob Greenstine & Ryan J. Johnson (eds.), Contemporary Encounters with Ancient Metaphysics. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 65-85.
    In this essay, we consider the formal and ontological implications of one specific and intensely contested dialectical context from which Deleuze’s thinking about structural ideal genesis visibly arises. This is the formal/ontological dualism between the principles, ἀρχαί, of the One (ἕν) and the Indefinite/Unlimited Dyad (ἀόριστος δυάς), which is arguably the culminating achievement of the later Plato’s development of a mathematical dialectic.3 Following commentators including Lautman, Oskar Becker, and Kenneth M. Sayre, we argue that the duality of the One and (...)
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  4. Univocal Reasoning and Inferential Presuppositions.Mikkel Gerken - 2012 - Erkenntnis 76 (3):373-394.
    I pursue an answer to the psychological question “what is it for S to presuppose that p?” I will not attempt a general answer. Rather, I will explore a particular kind of presuppositions that are constituted by the mental act of reasoning: Inferential presuppositions. Indeed, I will consider a specific kind of inferential presuppositions—one that is constituted by a specific reasoning competence: The univocality competence. Roughly, this is the competence that reliably governs the univocal thought-components’ operation as univocal in a (...)
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  5.  64
    Univocity and Analogy of Being in the Philosophy of Duns Scotus.S. Y. Watson - 1958 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 32:189-206.
  6.  18
    Univocity for Militants: Set-theoretical Ontology and the Death of the One.King-Ho Leung - 2017 - Journal of Cultural and Religious Theory 16 (3):347-366.
    This essay offers a reading of Badiou’s univocity of being in relation to his understanding of ontological immanence and also his commitment or indeed “fidelity” to ontologically articulating the atheistic premise that “God is dead”—which for Badiou also means “the One is not”. Although Badiou famously deploys set theory to develop his “univocal” mathematical ontology of the multiple in Being and Event, his most sustained and detailed discussion of the univocity of being is in his controversial critique of (...)
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  7. Problem : Univocity and Analogy of Being in the Philosophy of Duns Scotus.S. Y. Watson - 1958 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 32:189.
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  8.  12
    Univocity and Analogy of Being in the Philosophy of Duns Scotus.S. Y. Watson - 1958 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 32:189-206.
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  9. The Univocity of the Concept of Being in the Fourteenth Century: John Duns Scotus and William of Alnwick.Stephen D. Dumont - 1987 - Mediaeval Studies 49 (1):1-75.
  10. The Univocity of Real Essence in Locke.Allison Kuklok - 2021 - Oxford Studies in Early Modern Philosophy:61-99.
    I argue that Locke’s various descriptions of real essence pick out one and the same thing, namely a nature that can be ascribed to many things, and in terms of which we can get matters of classification right or wrong. On my reading, Locke does not attack real essences of the sort that are the essences of real species, but rather the presumption that a sorting according to our species concepts and their names is a sorting of things according to (...)
     
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  11. Univocity in Scotus's Quaestiones super Metaphysicam: The Solution to a Riddle.Giorgio Pini - 2005 - Medioevo 30:69-110.
  12. Cajetan on Scotus on Univocity.Joshua Hochschild - 2007 - Proceedings of the Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics 7:32-42.
    What role does Scotus‘s understanding of univocity play in Cajetan‘s development of a theory of analogy? In this paper I examine three relevant texts from Cajetan (question 3 of his commentary on Aquinas‘s De Ente et Essentia, his treatise De Nominum Analogia, and his commentary on question 13, article 5 of Aquinas‘s Summa Theologiae) in which Cajetan articulates his understanding of analogy at least in part through dialectical engagement with Scotus‘s arguments about univocity.
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  13.  69
    The Univocity of the Concept of Being in the Fourteenth Century: II. The De ente of Peter Thomae.Stephen D. Dumont - 1988 - Mediaeval Studies 50 (1):186-256.
  14. Univocity and Analogy: A Comparative Study of Gilbert Ryle and Martin Heidegger.Joshua Harris - 2012 - Diametros 34:34-50.
     
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  15. Univocity of being in William of Ockham's thought: a first approach.P. G. Leite Júnior - 2007 - In Roberto Hofmeister Pich (ed.), New Essays on Metaphysics as "Scientia Transcendens": Proceedings of the Second International Conference of Medieval Philosophy, Held at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande Do Sul (Pucrs), Porto Alegre/Brazil, 15-18 August 2006. Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales.
  16.  8
    Univocality and finitude.Renaud Barbaras - 2018 - Revista Filosófica de Coimbra 27 (54):299-312.
    O âmbito da fenomenologia pode ser circonscrito pelo que Husserl chamou de a priori universal da correlação entre o ente transcendente e seus modos subjetivos de doação. Este a priori significa ao mesmo tempo que a essência do ente envolve sua relação com uma consciência e que o sentido de ser do sujeito consiste em se relacionar com o ente transcendante, em fazê‑lo aparecer, o que equivale a dizer que uma consciência que não fosse cons-ciência de algo, ou seja, intencionalidade, (...)
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  17.  36
    Causality, Univocity, and First Philosophy in Metaphysics ii.Lloyd Gerson - 1991 - Ancient Philosophy 11 (2):331-349.
  18. The Doctrine of Univocity: Deleuze's Ontology of Immanence.Daniel W. Smith - 2001 - In Mary Bryden (ed.), Deleuze and Religion. Psychology Press. pp. 167-183.
  19.  41
    Heidegger, Metaphysics and the Univocity of Being.Philip Tonner - 2010 - Continuum.
    Introduction -- The univocity of being -- The modern predicament -- The problem of univocity in ancient and medieval philosophy -- From Heidegger to Aristotle -- Medieval philosophy -- Scholasticism -- Heidegger, Scotus, and univocity -- The question of being -- Analogy, the medieval experience of life -- Univocity and phenomenology -- Destruction and tradition -- Metaphysics -- Phenomenological philosophy and aletheia -- Descartes, scholasticism, and time -- The presupposition of the tradition -- Scholasticism, analogy, and (...)
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  20.  14
    The Univocity of the Concept of Being in the Philosophy of John Duns Scotus by Cyril L. Shircel, O. F. M.Berard Vogt - 1944 - Franciscan Studies 4 (3):295-296.
  21.  37
    Univocalism in Cajetan’s Doctrine of Analogy.Michael McCanles - 1968 - New Scholasticism 42 (1):18-47.
  22. Univocity of being and intentionality of knowledge-critical-essay on the genesis and sources of the thought of Brentano, Franz.M. Antonelli - 1990 - Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 10 (1):101-123.
     
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  23. Univocism and Monadology in Post-Avicennan Iranian Philosophy (Sadrâ alShîrâzî's Ishrâqî Hermeneutics ob Ibn al-Arabî's Gnosis and His Discussion of Avicennan Ontology).Carlos A. Segovia - 2003 - Endoxa 16:195-210.
  24. The univocity of the concept of being in the philosophy of John Duns Scotus..Cyril Louis Shircel - 1942 - Washington, D.C.,: The Catholic university of America press.
     
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  25. Univocity and mystery.R. Cross - 2007 - In Roberto Hofmeister Pich (ed.), New Essays on Metaphysics as "Scientia Transcendens": Proceedings of the Second International Conference of Medieval Philosophy, Held at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande Do Sul (Pucrs), Porto Alegre/Brazil, 15-18 August 2006. Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales.
  26. The univocity of being as experience of proximity: The aesthetics of the ontology of Gilles Deleuze.U. J. Organisti - 2001 - Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 93 (4):616-666.
     
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  27.  8
    Deleuze’s Univocity and Hegel’s Being - focused on their interpretative manners concerning Spinoza’s Substance-Attribute relation -.서세동 ) - 2018 - Modern Philosophy 11:85-111.
  28.  39
    Univocity of the Concept of Being in the Fourteenth Century III: An Early Scotist.Stephen F. Brown & Stephen D. Dumont - 1989 - Mediaeval Studies 51 (1):1-129.
  29. The Doctrine of Univocity is True and Salutary.Thomas Williams - 2005 - Modern Theology 21 (4):575-585.
    I shall confine my attention to the one Scotist doctrine that seems to be singled out as especially worrisome, the doctrine of univocity. In the first part of the paper I argue that the doctrine of univocity is true. So even if the doctrine has unwelcome consequences, we ought to affirm it anyway; it is not the job of the theologian or philosopher to shrink from uncomfortable truths. In the second part I argue further that the doctrine of (...)
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  30. Building bridges with words: an inferential account of ethical univocity.Mark Douglas Warren - 2018 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 48 (3-4):468-488.
    Explaining genuine moral disagreement is a challenge for metaethical theories. For expressivists, this challenge comes from the plausibility of agents making seemingly univocal claims while expressing incongruent conative attitudes. I argue that metaethical inferentialism – a deflationary cousin to expressivism, which locates meaning in the inferential import of our moral assertions rather than the attitudes they express – offers a unique solution to this problem. Because inferentialism doesn’t locate the source of moral disagreements in a clash between attitudes, but instead (...)
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  31.  41
    Albert the Great and “Univocal Analogy”. Salas - 2013 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 87 (4):611-635.
    In this paper I discuss Albert the Great’s notion of univocal analogy, which he raised in his Commentary on Pseudo-Dionysius’s De divinis nominibus. While other scholars such as Francis Ruello and Alain de Libera have addressed “analogy” as it pertains to Albert, I intend to treat the “univocal” aspect of “univocal analogy” so as to explain (1) how it informs Albert’s teaching on analogy, and (2) how it remains opposed to any pantheistic reduction of God to creature. While my own (...)
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  32.  43
    Duns Scotus’ univocity: applied to the debate on phenomenological theology.Guus H. Labooy - 2014 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 76 (1):53-73.
    Scotus’ theory of univocity is described: his exact definition of univocity and his view of transcendental concepts that are ‘simply simple’. These concepts are said to be univocally applied to God and creatures. Next, we describe Scotus’ views on univocity in ‘being’ and the precise meaning of the infinite and finite ‘mode’ of being. Finally, we apply these results to work of Heidegger and Marion. It appears that they had an insufficient grasp of the intricacies of Scotus’ (...)
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  33. Deleuze and Merleau-Ponty: Immanence, Univocity and Phenomenology.Jack Reynolds & Jon Roffe - 2006 - Journal of the British Society of Phenomenology 37 (3):228-51.
    This paper will seek firstly to understand Deleuze’s main challenges to phenomenology, particularly as they are expressed in The Logic of Sense and What is Philosophy?, although reference will also be made to Pure Immanence and Difference and Repetition. We will then turn to a discussion of one of the few passages in which Deleuze directly engages with Merleau-Ponty, which occurs in the chapter on art in What is Philosophy? In this text, he and Guattari offer a critique of what (...)
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  34.  64
    The Scotist Theory of Univocity.Lukáš Novák - 2006 - Studia Neoaristotelica 3 (1):17-27.
    The article explains the notion of univocity in line with the mature Scotistic doctrine, which plays so crucial a role in the Scotistic rejection of analogy as a middle ground between univocity and pure equivocity. Since univocity of a concept is found to consist in its perfect unity, and the perfect unity of a concept is achieved by means of perfect abstraction, the notion of this so-called abstraction by precision is made clear and contrasted with the so-called (...)
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  35.  11
    Scotus’s Doctrine of Univocity and the Medieval Tradition of Metaphysics.Stephen D. Dumont - 1997 - In Jan Aertsen & Andreas Speer (eds.), Was ist Philosophie im Mittelalter? Qu'est-ce que la philosophie au moyen âge? What is Philosophy in the Middle Ages?: Akten des X. Internationalen Kongresses für Mittelalterliche Philosophie der Société Internationale pour l'Etude de la Philosophie Médié. Erfurt: De Gruyter. pp. 193-212.
  36.  55
    Moral Convergence and the Univocity Problem.David Merli - 2007 - American Philosophical Quarterly 44 (4):297 - 313.
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  37.  3
    Evidence of Things Seen: Univocation, Visibility and Reassurance in Post-Reformation Polemic.Joshua Rodda - 2015 - Perichoresis 13 (1):57-74.
    This article reaches out to the audience for controversial religious writing after the English Reformation, by examining the shared language of attainable truth, of clarity and certainty, to be found in Protestant and Catholic examples of the same. It argues that we must consider those aspects of religious controversy that lie simultaneously above and beneath its doctrinal content: the logical forms in which it was framed, and the assumptions writers made about their audiences’ needs and responses. Building on the work (...)
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  38.  46
    Is Existence a Univocal or a Multivocal Expression?Sven Edvard Rodhe - 1948 - Theoria 14 (3):238-264.
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  39.  45
    On the univocity of rationality: a response to Nigel Biggar’s ‘Why religion deserves a place in secular medicine’.Xavier Symons - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (11):870-872.
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  40. Thomas Sutton on univocation, equivocation, and analogy.Mark G. Henninger - 2006 - The Thomist 70 (4):537-575.
     
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  41. Duns Scotus and the univocity of the concept of being.L. A. De Boni - 2007 - In Roberto Hofmeister Pich (ed.), New Essays on Metaphysics as "Scientia Transcendens": Proceedings of the Second International Conference of Medieval Philosophy, Held at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande Do Sul (Pucrs), Porto Alegre/Brazil, 15-18 August 2006. Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales.
     
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  42.  11
    Postmodernity and univocity: a critical account of radical orthodoxy and John Duns Scotus.Daniel P. Horan - 2014 - Minneapolis: Fortress Press.
    Horan offers a substantial challenge to the narrative of radical orthodoxy's idiosyncratic take on Scotus and his role in ushering in the philosophical age of the modern. This volume not only corrects the received account of Scotus but opens a constructive way forward toward a positive assessment and appropriation of Scotus's work for contemporary theology. --Book cover.
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  43.  7
    Geraldus Odonis: On the Univocity of the Concept of Being.O. F. M. Gál - 1992 - Franciscan Studies 52 (1):23-51.
  44.  46
    Cartesians, Strawsonians and the univocal meaning of mental predicates.Yakir Levin - 2004 - Acta Analytica 19 (32):91-106.
    The paper examines the Cartesian and the Strawsonian answers to the question of why self-applied and other-applied mental predicates mean the same. While these answers relate to different, complementary aspects of this question, they seem and are usually considered as incompatible. Indeed, their apparent incompatibility constitutes a major objection to the Cartesian answer. A primary aim of the paper is to show that the Strawsonian answer does not pose a real problem to the Cartesian answer. Unlike other attempts to show (...)
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  45.  20
    La controverse sur l’univocation de l’étant et le surtranscendantal. La métaphysique de Nicolas Bonet.Isabelle Mandrella - 2008 - Quaestio 8:159-175.
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  46. Scotus' doctrine of the univocity of being and the controversy concerning its interpretation in baroque Scotism.L. Novak - 2004 - Filosoficky Casopis 52 (4):569-581.
     
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  47.  49
    Dominic of Flanders’ Critique of John Duns Scotus’ Primary Argument for the Univocity of Being.Domenic D’Ettore - 2018 - Vivarium 56 (1-2):176-199.
    This article considers the attempt by a prominent fifteenth-century follower of Thomas Aquinas, Dominic of Flanders, to address John Duns Scotus’ most famous argument for the univocity of being. According to Scotus, the intellect must have a concept of being that is univocal to substantial and accidental being, and to finite and infinite being, on the grounds that an intellect cannot be both certain and doubtful through the same concept, but an intellect can be certain that something is a (...)
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  48.  3
    The concept of univocity regarding the predication of God and creature according to William Ockham.Matthew Clement Menges - 1952 - St. Bonaventure, N.Y.,: Franciscan Institute.
  49.  14
    Love, On the Univocity of Rawls’s Difference Principle.Alain Boyer - 2023 - Journal of Philosophical Investigations 17 (45):60-71.
    A double ambiguity has been charged against Rawls’s difference principle (DP). Is it Maximin, Leximin, or something else? Usually, following A. Sen, scholars identify DP with the so-called Leximin. One argues here that one has to distinguish 1° the Leximin, 2° the Maximin (as rule of justice formally analogous to the maximin rule of decision), represented by the figure in L of the perfectly substitutable goods, and 3° the genuine DP. When the augmentation of inequality benefits the worse off, only (...)
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  50.  21
    Perfection, Infinity and Univocity.Frederick Sontag - 1952 - Review of Metaphysics 6 (2):219 - 232.
    If "being" is usually defined in terms of something roughly equivalent to the Aristotelian categories, are we forced to say that whatever escapes classification by these categories is to that extent beyond or above being? For instance, if "perfection" is used outside of the categories which apply to particular beings and is attributed to a first principle of all things, is "perfection" in this application so different from "perfection" as it applies within the categories that the two applications share nothing (...)
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