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         Medieval Philosophy:     more books (99)
  1. Medieval Philosophy and Theology: 1993 by Norman Kretzmann, Mark D. Jordan, 1994-02
  2. John Buridan (Great Medieval Thinkers) by Gyula Klima, 2008-12-23
  3. The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Jewish Philosophy (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
  4. The Church and Vernacular Literature in Medieval France (Studies and Texts)
  5. Philosophy and Rabbinic Culture: Jewish Interpretation and Controversy in Medieval Languedoc by Gregg Stern, 2010-10-13
  6. Law, Reason, and Morality, in Medieval Jewish Philosophy: Sadia Gaon, Bahya ibn Pakuda, and Moses Maimonides by Jonathan Jacobs, 2010-09-10
  7. Philosophy, Theology And Mysticism in Medieval Islam: Texts And Studies on the Development And History of Kalam (Volume I) (Variorum Collected Studies Series) by Richard M. Frank, Dimitri Gutas, 2006-01-30
  8. Hegel: Lectures on the History of Philosophy: Volume III: Medieval and Modern Philosophy, Revised Edition (Hegel Lectures)
  9. Alfonso De LA Torre's Vision Deleytable: Philosophical Rationalism and the Religious Imagination in 15th Century Spain (Medieval and Early Modern Iberian World) by Luis M. Giron-Negron, 2000-12
  10. Fifty Key Medieval Thinkers (Routledge Key Guides) by G.R. Evans, 2002-03-22
  11. The Individual and the Cosmos in Renaissance Philosophy by Ernst Cassirer, 2010-04-01
  12. Perceptions of the Past in the Early Middle Ages (Conway Lectures in Medieval Studies) by Rosamond McKitterick, 2006-10-15
  13. The Christian Philosophy Of St Thomas Aquinas by Etienne Gilson, 1994-03-31
  14. Lectures on the History of Philosophy, Volume 3: Medieval and Modern Philosophy (Lectures on the History of Philosophy Vol. 3) by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 1995-05-28

81. Trinity College Cambridge - Medieval Philosophy Micro-Colloquium
Contacts Home About Trinity Conferences, etc. medieval philosophyMicroColloquium medieval philosophy Micro-Colloquium. 12
http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/index.php?pageid=286

82. Ancient & Medieval Philosophy
PHL111 INTRODUCTION TO WESTERN PHILOSOPHY ANCIENT MEDIEVAL Winter 2003 DESCRIPTIONSurvey of Classical (Greek Roman) and Medieval Christian Philosophy.
http://www.wutsamada.com/alma/ancient/
PHL111: INTRODUCTION
TO WESTERN PHILOSOPHY:
Winter 2003 INSTRUCTOR
Larry Hauser
lshauser@aol.com
http://members.aol.com/lshauser/virtoff.html Office
: SAC 347 Phone Office Hours: TEXTS (required): W.T. Jones, A History of Western Philosophy nd edition): volume 1, The Classical Mind (CM) and volume 2, The Medieval Mind (MM). DESCRIPTION: GRADES WILL BE BASED ON ASSIGNMENT DUE DATE VALUE Commentaries (best 4 of 5) Periodically 1/5 of course Regularly 1/5 of course Midterm Exam Thursday, 2/20 1/5 of course Term Paper Thursday, 4/10 1/5 of course Final Examination Thursday 4/17 at 2pm 1/5 of course Online Resources
LH's virtual office
http://members.aol.com/lshauser/virtoff.html
http://members.aol.com/lshauser/index.html
APPROXIMATE COURSE CALENDAR
Class regularly meets 1:00-2:20 TuTh in SAC 106 (note exceptions below) MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY Jan. 6 Presocratic Philosophy
CM 1-20 Jan. 8 Presocratic Philosophy
CM 21-39 Jan. 10 Jan. 13
CM 63-88 Jan. 15 Atomism CM 88-107 Jan. 17 Jan. 20 MLK Day CM 108-146 Jan. 22 Plato: Science, Etc. CM 147-174 Jan. 24

83. Phl 349 Medieval Philosophy

http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/philosophy/faculty/koons/349.htm
Phl 349
Medieval Philosophy
Prof. Robert Koons Spring 2003
TuTh 9:30 AM, Garrison 3
Unique number 39435
Office Hours:
Wed. 3-4 pm; Th 3:30-4:30 pm
WAG 405 Some occasional changes in office hours: Thurs., Feb. 13 moved to 11 am-noon.
Syllabus
Texts
The following texts should be available in the bookstores: Medieval Philosophy Etienne Gilson, The Christian Philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas James F. Anderson, Introduction to the Metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas Paul Vincent Spade, ed., Five Medieval Texts on the Problem of Universals
Evaluation
Short (5-7 page) midterm paper (due March 20) Longer (10-15 page) term paper (due May 7) Consideration will be given to class discussion Suggested paper topics for short paper
Lecture Outlines
Week 1: January 14 (Overview of Medieval Mind). January 16 (Plato and Platonism). Week 2: January 21 (Augustine, part I). January 23 (Augustine, part II). Week 3: January 27 (Boethius, part I January 30 (Boethius, part II Week 4: Feb. 4 and 6 (Anselm Week 5: Feb. 11 (Abelard, Part I). Feb. 11/13 (Abelard, Part II Feb. 13 (The Al-falsafa Philosophers, Part I). Week 6: Feb. 18-20 (Arabic Philosophers

84. History Of Medieval Philosophy As Part Of The 'Grundriss Der Geschichte Der Phil
researchproject. History of medieval philosophy as part of the 'Grundrissder Geschichte der Philosophie'. The international research
http://www.research-projects.unizh.ch/phil/unit62200/area286/p675.htm
research project History of Medieval Philosophy as part of the 'Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie' The international research project is planning a manual for the history of medieval philosophy in five volumes in collaboration with the University of Fribourg. The first two volumes in preparation are the 12th century (coordinated by Prof. Dr. Ruedi Imbach and Dr. Thomas Ricklin in Fribourg) and the 13th century (coordinated by Prof. Dr. Peter Schulthess and PD Dr. Christoph Flueler in Zurich). The project is part of the 'Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie'. More Information Contacts PD Dr. Ch. christophe.flueler@unifr.ch Prof. Dr. R. Imbach jr.imbach@unifr.ch Prof. Dr. P. Schulthess (Project Leader) schulthess@philos.unizh.ch Supported By SNF Duration Dec 1997 to Dec 2000 Last Update Responsible Professor or Research Area Leader: Prof. Dr. Peter Schulthess Institute or Clinic: Philosophisches Seminar Faculty: Use the Eurospider retrieval system to find similar projects Use the Eurospider retrieval system to search the research report For authorized person(s) only Comments to uni research page generation 06.03.2003

85. Title Details - Cambridge University Press
Home Catalogue The Cambridge Companion to medieval philosophy. Related Areas TheCambridge Companion to medieval philosophy. Edited by AS McGrade. c. £15.95.
http://books.cambridge.org/0521000637.htm
Home Catalogue
Related Areas: Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects Cambridge Companions to Philosophy
New titles email
For updates on new titles in:
Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects
The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Philosophy
Edited by A. S. McGrade
Hardback Email friend about this title
Cambridge University Press 2001. Security
Order by phone (+44 (0)1223 326050) or fax (+44 (0)1223 326111).

86. Phil 205: Ancient & Medieval Philosophy
PHIL 205 ANCIENT AND medieval philosophy. David L. Rouse. OfficeZ216 emaildlr9g@mail.uvawise.edu 3764577. TEXTS All readings
http://www.uvawise.edu/philosophy/phil205/Syllabus.htm
PHIL 205: ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY
David L. Rouse Office: Z216
email:dlr9g@mail.uvawise.edu
TEXTS: All readings are on the World Wide Web site http://www.uvawise.edu/philosophy/, and are linked to this syllabus. PURPOSE OF THE COURSE: The purpose of the course is to introduce the student to the Western philosophical heritage from its beginnings in classical Greek culture through the Middle Ages. Special focus will be given both to philosophy's contribution to the development of the Western cultural heritage and the way that heritage is reflected in philosophical literature. COURSE REQUIREMENTS AND GRADING: Students are expected to attend class and do the assigned readings before each class session. The course grade will be based on three exams during the course and a comprehensive final. The final will constitute 40% of the course grade, the other three exams 15% each. The remaining 15% will be based on class participation. Grades are assigned as follows. 92-100 A
90-91.9 A-
88-89.9 B+

87. Medieval Philosophy
Philosophy 1080 medieval philosophy {Meets MW 3.004.15 in 318 CL} ThomasAquinas Syllabus Instructor Gerald J. Massey, Ph.D., Distinguished
http://www.pitt.edu/~gmas/1080/medievalphil.html
Philosophy 1080 Medieval Philosophy
Thomas Aquinas
Syllabus Instructor: Gerald J. Massey Ph.D., Distinguished Service Professor of Philosophy
1009F Cathedral of Learning; Tel: 624-0392 e-mail: gmas+@pitt.edu
Textbooks
St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa contra Gentiles; Book One: God, U. of Notre Dame Press
St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa contra Gentiles; Book Two: Creation, U. of Notre Dame Press
*Study Guides: Study Guide for Book One
Book Two
Additional Materials
Summa Theologiae, Part One, Question Two

Quiz and Examination Questions:
Normal Course Requirements: There will be two announced 75-minute quizzes. Quiz questions will be drawn from a list of questions distributed at least one week in advance. A 6-10 page paper on an approved topic will be due at 3.00 p.m. on April 17. There will be a two-hour final examination during the final examination period. Each student will receive three numerical grades (a), (b), and (c) as follows: (a) The Quiz Grade (which is the average of the grades on the two 75-minute quizzes) (b) The Paper Grade (c) The Final Examination Grade The numerical Course Grade will be the average of two grades, namely, the Paper Grade (b) and the better of (a) and (c). For example, if the Paper Grade were 86, the Quiz Grade 94, and the Final Exam Grade 88, the numerical Course grade would be 90, i.e., the average of 86 and 94 (since 94 is a better grade than 88).

88. Philosophy And Theology
Links to sites on the most influential writers and thinkers who have influenced theology through the years.Category Society philosophy philosophy of Religion...... medieval Theology and Religion) Professional Associations. American PhilosophicalAssociation (APA) Canadian Philosophical Association Directories of philosophy
http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/philosophy/phil.html
Primary Texts
Aristotle
Aristotle's Works (Directory) (Virginia Tech.) 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.)

89. Medieval Theories Of Analogy
Entry in the Stanford Encyclopaedia of philosophy, by E. Jennifer Ashworth.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/analogy-medieval/
version
history HOW TO CITE
THIS ENTRY
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A B C D ... Z content revised
NOV
Medieval Theories of Analogy
per prius et posterius ). A third type of analogy, sometimes appealed to 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.

90. Jacques Maritain Center: St. Thomas Aquinas And Medieval Philosophy: I
of minds there is no chapter more interesting or more instructive than that whichdeals with the progress of men in the knowledge of philosophy during the
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 (

91. 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.

92. James Luberda
Essays by James Luberda on literary theory, composition, medieval studies, and the philosophy of mind.
http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~jbl00001
Resources Local Search Engine for These Pages
This site provides the current research and course materials of James Luberda of the University of Connecticut. If you have an interest in cognitive science , especially if in conjunction with literature and composition, you may find some useful information collected here. Other topics addressed reflect personal interests and study in literary theory, philosophy, composition theory, and medieval studies. I am presently developing a composition textbook with a distinctly cognitive science bent. The preface and first two chapters are available for review and use here. James Luberda www.labyrinthbooks.com
Has an excellent remainders/closeouts sale annex with new titles frequently added. kaboombooks.com (an ever-changing inventory of heavily discounted academic books)
Kaboombooks has been down for a while now... I'm leaving the link on in hopes it will return. bookpricer.com

93. ARCHAEOLOGY
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/MDST.html

94. Medieval And Renaissance Culture Links
European medieval and Renaissance Culture, Art, Architecture, History, philosophy, Science, Religion
http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ33.HTM#Science and Learning/
M edieval and R enaissance C ulture Our Medieval Wedding: October 6, 1984 (more Armstrong Family Pictures) Click the banner to learn more about and purchase this book and additional popular apologetics and theology titles by Dave Armstrong C O N T E N T S (Hyper-linked) Art and Architecture (Up to c.1700)

95. 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 WHOLESALE REPRINTS ... 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.com . We are not equipped to search for titles not listed on abe or in our catalogues, if you do not find what you are looking for we suggest you try our sister store www.powells.com or www.addall.com . 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.

96. Unsworths Booksellers Of London And Oxford
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/

97. 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

98. 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:

99. Medieval Theories Of Modality
Article at the Stanford Encyclopaedia of philosophy.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/modality-medieval/
version
history HOW TO CITE
THIS ENTRY
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A B C D ... Z content revised
JUN
Medieval Theories of Modality
possibility as a potency, the model of antecedent necessities and possibilities with respect to a certain moment of time (diachronic modalities), and the model of possibility as non-contradictoriness. None of these conceptions, which were well known to early medieval thinkers through the works of Boethius , was associated with the idea of modality as involving reference to simultaneous alternatives. This new paradigm was introduced into Western thought in early twelfth-century discussions influenced by Augustine's theological conception of God as acting by choice between alternative histories. Ancient habits of thinking continued to play an important role in scholasticism, however, and the theoretical significance of the new conception was not fully realized before the works of John Duns Scotus and some other early fourteenth century thinkers.
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

100. Search Argos
Limited area search provided by the University of Evansville of ancient and medieval Internet resources.Category Computers Internet Searching Search Engines Specialized...... of peerreview that Argos uses to limit the range of responses to philosophy-relatedresources. The Labyrinth A World Wide Web Server for medieval Studies The
http://argos.evansville.edu/
Argos
Limited Area Search of the
Ancient and Medieval Internet
An important message to the users of Argos: Effective February 6th, 2003, Argos has been officially taken offline . Insufficient funding for regular upkeep and maintenance have made this necessary. Argos went on-line to the public on October 3rd, 1996. Within six months it had processed more than a million search requests. In the years that followed, Argos has served the academic community well. However, the expense of running a quality-controlled search engine exceeds our minimal budget. I apologize for any inconvenience that Argos' absence may cause. If you have questions, comments or observations, please email them to me at tb2@evansville.edu Sincerely, Anthony F. Beavers
General Editor ASSOCIATE SITES
Abzu: Guide to Resources for the Study of the Ancient Near East Available on the Internet
Edited by Charles E. Jones (Oriental Institute), Abzu is an extensive index of resources on the pre-Islamic civilizations of Western Asia and Egypt.
Byzantium: Byzantine Studies on the Internet
Edited by Paul Halsall (Fordham University)

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