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         Philosophy Medieval:     more books (99)
  1. Medieval Philosophy: Essential Readings with Commentary (Blackwell Readings in the History of Philosophy) by Gyula Klima, 2007-08-03
  2. The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Philosophy (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
  3. Medieval Political Philosophy: A Sourcebook (Cornell Paperbacks)
  4. The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy: From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism, 1100-1600
  5. The Early Heidegger & Medieval Philosophy: Phenomenology for the Godforsaken by S. J. Mcgrath, 2006-11-29
  6. Eschatological Themes in Medieval Jewish Philosophy (Aquinas Lecture) by Arthur Hyman, 2002-03
  7. Philosophy in the Middle Ages (Third Edition): The Christian, Islamic, and Jewish Traditions by Arthur Hyman, 2010-09-24
  8. A History of Philosophy, Vol. 2: Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy From Augustine to Duns Scotus by Frederick Copleston, 1993-03-01
  9. Medieval Philosophy: From St. Augustine to Nicholas of Cusa (Readings in the History of Philosophy)
  10. Philosophy and Theology in the Middle Ages by G. R. Evans, 1993-03-10
  11. Medieval Philosophy: An Historical and Philosophical Introduction by John Marenbon, 2006-10-31
  12. Historical Dictionary of Medieval Philosophy and Theology (Historical Dictionaries of Religions, Philosophies and Movements) by Stephen F. Brown, 2007-03-16
  13. Later Medieval Philosophy by John Marenbon, 1991-12-13
  14. The Spirit of Mediaeval Philosophy by Etienne Gilson, 1991-04-30

1. Philosophy, Medieval (subject At ISBNdb.com)
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Philosophy, Medieval
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Here are some of the most recently loaded books on this subject, you can also see all 659 matching books on a separate page. Progrs̈, rǎction, dčadence dans l'Occident mďiv̌al
ťudes recueillies par Emmanul̈e Baumgartner et Laurence Harf-Lancner
Publisher: Genv̈e : Droz
ISBN: 2600008314 Edition: (pbk.) Medieval thought
Medieval thought: St. Augustine to Ockham
by Gordon Leff
Publisher: Atlantic Highlands, N.J. : Humanities Press ISBN: 0391017861 Ideĭnye techenii︠a︡ drevnerusskoĭ mysli M. N. Gromov, V. V. Milʹkov Publisher: Sankt-Peterburg : Izd-vo Russkogo Khristianskogo gumanitarnogo in-ta ISBN: 5888120979 LCC: B4201
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  • "Philosophy, Medieval" Topical Term, 650/a Similar Subjects: Nonfiction Philosophy Medieval Thought Philosophy, Medieval Congresses
  • 2. Philosophy: History & Surveys / Medieval: Philosophy, Medieval Books
    Philosophy, Medieval Books. Discount prices on, Maimonides the Rationalist, The Legend of the Middle Ages Philosophical Explorations of Medieval Christianity, Judaism, and Islam
    http://www.allbookstores.com/Philosophy/History_and_Surveys/Medieval/Philosophy_
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    3. Subject 'Philosophy, Medieval', All Books (ISBNdb.com)
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    "Homo mysticus
    "Homo mysticus: a guide to Maimonides's Guide for the perplexed"
    José Faur

    Publisher: Syracuse, N.Y. : Syracuse University Press
    ISBN: 0815627815 DDC: 181.06 LCC: BM545 Edition: (pbk. : alk. paper) "Homo mysticus
    "Homo mysticus: a guide to Maimonides's Guide for the perplexed"
    José Faur
    Publisher: Syracuse, N.Y. : Syracuse University Press ISBN: 0815627807 DDC: 181.06 LCC: BM545 Edition: (cloth : alk. paper) "Lectio philosophorum" "Lectio philosophorum"; recherches sur l'École de Chartres Jeauneau, Edouard Publisher: Amsterdam, A. M. Hakkert ISBN: 9025606067 "Our place in al-Andalus" "Our place in al-Andalus": Kabbalah, philosophy, literature in Arab Jewish letters Gil Anidjar Publisher: Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press ISBN: 0804741212 DDC: 946.802 LCC: BM545 Edition: (pbk. : alk. paper) "Staub und Hauch" und Person, vom Bild zur Idee "Staub und Hauch" und Person, vom Bild zur Idee: von der symbolischen zur rationalen Erkenntnis der menschlichen Natur in der Philosophie des Mittelalters Wolfgang Bessner Publisher: Cuxhaven : Junghans-Verlag ISBN: 3926848049 LCC: B738 (Paradosis) (Paradosis): studies in memory of Edwin A. Quain

    4. Philosophy: History & Surveys / Medieval: Philosophy, Medieval Books (Sorted By
    Philosophy, Medieval Books. Discount prices on, Die Brennende Vernunft Studien Zur Semantik Der rationalitas Bei Hildegard Von Bingen, Die Grosse Rauberhohle Religion
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    5. Academia.edu | People Who Have Philosophy (Medieval Studies) As A Research Inter
    Academia.edu helps academics follow the latest research.
    http://www.academia.edu/People/Philosophy_Medieval_Studies_
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    Bruce Janz
    University of Central Florida
    Faculty Member
    Philosophy Department
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    6. Medieval Philosophy : Routledge Encyclopedia Of Philosophy Online
    Online sample article, by Scott MacDonald and Norman Kretzmann. Reviews the history and characteristics of this period of European thought.
    http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/B078
    HOME HELP Article Bibliography ...
    Medieval philosophy
    SCOTT MacDONALD NORMAN KRETZMANN
    Medieval philosophy
    Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Western Europe from about ad The most significant extra-philosophical influence on medieval philosophy throughout its thousand-year history is Christianity. Christian institutions sustain medieval intellectual life, and Christianity’s texts and ideas provide rich subject matter for philosophical reflection. Although most of the greatest thinkers of the period were highly trained theologians, their work addresses perennial philosophical issues and takes a genuinely philosophical approach to understanding the world. Even their discussion of specifically theological issues is typically philosophical, permeated with philosophical ideas, rigorous argument and sophisticated logical and conceptual analysis. The enterprise of philosophical theology is one of medieval philosophy’s greatest achievements. The way in which medieval philosophy develops in dialogue with the texts of ancient philosophy and the early Christian tradition (including patristic philosophy) is displayed in its two distinctive pedagogical and literary forms, the textual commentary and the disputation. In explicit commentaries on texts such as the works of Aristotle, Boethius’ theological treatises and Peter Lombard’s classic theological textbook, the Sentences , medieval thinkers wrestled anew with the traditions that had come down to them. By contrast, the disputation – the form of discourse characteristic of the university environment of the later Middle Ages – focuses not on particular texts but on specific philosophical or theological issues. It thereby allows medieval philosophers to gather together relevant passages and arguments scattered throughout the authoritative literature and to adjudicate their competing claims in a systematic way. These dialectical forms of thought and interchange encourage the development of powerful tools of interpretation, analysis and argument ideally suited to philosophical inquiry. It is the highly technical nature of these academic (or scholastic) modes of thought, however, that provoked the hostilities of the Renaissance humanists whose attacks brought the period of medieval philosophy to an end.

    7. Medieval Philosophy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    All the main branches of philosophy today were a part of Medieval philosophy. Medieval philosophy also included most of the areas originally established by the pagan philosophers
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_philosophy
    Medieval philosophy
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search History of
    Western philosophy
    ... Ancient
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    ... Islamic See also Eastern philosophy
    Babylonian
    Indian Iranian ... e Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Europe in the era now known as medieval or the Middle Ages , the period roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D. to the Renaissance in the sixteenth century. It is defined partly by the process of rediscovering the ancient culture developed in Greece and Rome in the classical period, and partly by the need to address theological problems and to integrate sacred doctrine with secular learning. The history of medieval philosophy is traditionally divided into two main periods: the period in the Latin West following the Early Middle Ages until the twelfth century, when the works of Aristotle and Plato were preserved and cultivated and the 'golden age' of the twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in the Latin West, which witnessed the culmination of the recovery of ancient philosophy , along with a reception of its Arabic commentators , and significant developments in the field of Philosophy of religion Logic and Metaphysics The medieval era was disparagingly treated by the Renaissance humanists, who saw it as a barbaric 'middle' period between the classical age of Greek and Roman culture, and the 'rebirth' or

    8. | Dir | Society | Philosophy | History_of_Philosophy | Medieval - SomaliNet
    PUBLIC NOTICE Somalinet is going through major changes with upgraded hardware and new software
    http://www.somalinet.com/dir/Society/Philosophy/History_of_Philosophy/Medieval

    9. University Of Notre Dame Press
    Publishes in many fields, but especially in religion, philosophy, medieval studies, and Irish studies.
    http://undpress.nd.edu/

    10. Canadian Content > Philosophy
    Canadian Content explores Medieval. Includes free listings and information about Medieval from the CanConDir.
    http://www.canadiancontent.net/dir/Top/Society/Philosophy/History_of_Philosophy/
    Medieval Search: This Site The Web Add to your site Contact us Register for free!
    Medieval (History of Philosophy)
    Canadian Content Society Philosophy Medieval
    Additional Information: The medieval period in philosophy dates from the end of the Roman empire (5th century CE) to the European Renaissance (14th century CE), and is largely defined by Neoplatonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic philosophies.
    Explore Medieval further on these related pages:
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    Medieval Sites:
    The Medieval Problem of Universals
    From the Stanford Encyclopedia by Gyula Klima.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/universals-medieval/ Teaching Materials on Medieval Philosophy
    A study of Duns Scotus, William of Ockham and other fourteenth century philosophers, and of medieval elements in Descartes and other early modern philosophers. Course notes by R.J. Kilcullen.
    http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/medph.html

    11. Authorities & Vocabularies (Library Of Congress): Philosophy, Medieval
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    12. Semester Begins + Aquinas + Contemporary Philosophy + Medieval + Ministry + Ambe
    MASS – (Fr Michael) — God is the same yesterday as today, on vacation, on retreat, back in the daily routine. Do you believe in Jesus? How is your life different because of
    http://catholickermit.wordpress.com/2008/01/07/semester-begins-aquinas-contempor
    Catholic Kermit

    13. Medieval Theories Of Modality (Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy)
    From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Simo Knuuttila.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/modality-medieval/
    Cite this entry Search the SEP Advanced Search Tools ...
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    Medieval Theories of Modality
    First published Wed Jun 30, 1999; substantive revision Wed Nov 5, 2008 First published Wed Jun 30, 1999; substantive revision Thu Jul 31, 2003; substantive revision Sun Aug 31, 2008 While the new idea of associating modal terms with simultaneous alternatives was used also in thirteenth-century theology, it was not often discussed in philosophical contexts. The increasing acceptance of Aristotle's philosophy in the thirteenth century gave support to traditional modal paradigms, as is seen in Robert Kilwardby's influential commentary on Aristotle's Prior Analytics , in which modal syllogistics is treated as an essentialist theory of the structures of being. There were analogous discussions of philosophical and theological modalities in Arabic philosophy. Arabic modal theories influenced Latin discussions mainly through the translations of Averroes's works. John Duns Scotus developed the conception of modality as alternativeness into a detailed theory. A logically possible state of affairs is something to which to be is not repugnant, though it may not be compossible with other possibilities. Scotus's modal semantics influenced early fourteenth-century philosophy and theology in many ways. The new modal logic which was developed by William Ockham, John Buridan and others was based on the new modal semantics. Thirteenth-century essentialist assumptions were dropped from modal syllogistics, the Aristotelian version of which was regarded as a fragmentary theory without a sufficient explication of the various fine structures of modal propositions.

    14. PHIL P515 29794 Medieval Philosophy
    Philosophy Medieval Philosophy P515 29794 Spade. Topic History of the Problem of Universals in the Middle Ages Contents
    http://www.indiana.edu/~deanfac/blfal09/phil/phil_p515_29794.html

    15. Medieval Philosophy
    A study of Duns Scotus, William of Ockham and other fourteenth century philosophers, and of medieval elements in Descartes and other early modern philosophers. Course notes by
    http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/medph.html
    Teaching Materials on Medieval Philosophy
    John Kilcullen
    For my homepage, go to Politics, Philosophy and Medieval Studies Download 1 Download 2
    Courses (no longer offered)
    Course description, Medieval Philosophy Course description, Later Medieval Philosophy Website for Sydney University Course The Medieval Intellectual Tradition
    Reading Guides
    These courses were taught using audio cassette tapes and printed reading books. The reading books contained photocopied extracts from translations of medieval philosophers. The idea was that the student would play the cassette, pressing the pause button from time to time to read another segment of text from the reading book. The cassettes give a detailed commentary on the text.
    The web pages listed below are (mostly) transcripts of the audio cassettes. Anyone wishing to use them will need to have at hand, open on the desk, the text on which the cassette comments (or some equivalent translation). The commentary is not likely to make much sense without the translations. (Some of the pages do "stand alone", but most refer to a text.) Medieval Philosophy: An Introduction
    Greek Philosophical Background
    Aristotle on the Web Macquarie Library books on Aristotle ...
    Reading Guide to Boethius,

    16. Medieval Theories Of Conscience (Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy)
    From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Doug Langston.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/conscience-medieval/
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    Medieval Theories of Conscience
    First published Mon Nov 23, 1998; substantive revision Fri May 5, 2006 Through conscience and its related notion, synderesis, human beings discern what is right and wrong. While there are many medieval views about the nature of conscience, most views regard human beings as capable of knowing in general what ought to be done and applying this knowledge through conscience to particular decisions about action. The ability to act on the determinations of conscience is, moreover, tied to the development of the moral virtues, which in turn refines the functions of conscience.
    1. Background
    Late medieval discussions of conscience derive from Peter Lombard's presentation of the concepts of conscience and synderesis in his Sentences In these discussions, constant reference was made to certain works by Plato and Aristotle. Neither Plato nor Aristotle explicitly mention conscience, however. It is their discussions of the virtues, practical wisdom, and weakness of will that form the critical backdrop to medieval discussions of conscience. These discussions were heavily influenced by Augustine's modification of these classical authors. For example, Augustine championed Plato's notion of the unity of the virtues, but he argued that love of God provided the unity to them. Moreover, he claimed that what pagan authors regarded as virtues were in fact vices unless they were developed for the love of God.

    17. Christian Philosophy - Medieval Christian Philosophies
    A selection of articles related to christian philosophy medieval christian philosophies
    http://www.experiencefestival.com/christian_philosophy_-_medieval_christian_phil

    18. Academia.edu | People Who Have Philosophy (Medieval Studies) As A Research Inter
    Academia.edu helps academics follow the latest research.
    http://www.academia.edu/people/Medieval_Studies/Philosophy
    People in
    Philosophy (Medieval Studies)
    Find people in: Research Interests:
    University:
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    sort by: most followers most recent most active
    Bruce Janz
    University of Central Florida
    Faculty Member
    Philosophy Department
    Follow Bruce's work
    What is Following?
    Following Bruce's work means that, in your Academia.edu News Feed, you will see Bruce's:
    • status updates new papers new research interests
    and other research updates.
    Bruce's Research Interests

    19. Medieval Theories Of Practical Reason (Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy)
    From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Anthony Celano.
    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/practical-reason-med
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    Medieval Theories of Practical Reason
    First published Fri Oct 8, 1999; substantive revision Tue Nov 21, 2006 Medieval theories of moral reasoning have their origins in the moral theology of St. Augustine and the rational ethics of Aristotle. Until the thirteenth century Augustine's responses to questions concerning free will, predestination, the nature of goodness, and divine freedom dominated moral speculation in the Latin West. For Augustine morality demands the human will's conformity to the prescriptions of the immutable, necessary and eternal law. Augustine argues in his work on free will that the eternal law "is called supreme reason, which must always be obeyed, and through it the evil deserve an unhappy life and the good a blessed life; and through this law we have derived temporal laws rightly constructed and correctly emended." The ideals of eternal law are universally imprinted upon human intellects and are the immutable standards by which human actions may be judged.

    20. Questia Online Library
    Please select at least one (1) media type and then click on Search .
    http://www.questia.com/SM.qst?act=search&subjects=Philosophy, Medieval&s

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