Oxford, Oxford University Press 2004 xvi + 272pp., 21cm., in the series "Great Medieval Thinkers", softcover, small piece of paper detached from first title page, text and intior are clean and bright, good condition, R120305
Reference : R120305
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, Brepols, 2024 Hardback, 1204 pages, Illustrations:1 b/w, 25 tables b/w., Language(s):English, French, Latin. ISBN 9782503612089.
Summary Principia were an obligatory step on the medieval university path to becoming a master of theology. As inaugural lectures on the four books of the Sentences of Peter Lombard, they provided the first opportunity for a scholastic to defend a philosophical-theological worldview. These lectures were also a way for the theologian, now a sententiarius, to present himself and to make a name for himself, initially by delivering in a speech an introduction to the course and by debating with his fellows. The present book takes a collective approach to offer a survey of the evolution of the genre, mapping the dissemination of this exercise during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries across Europe. As an academic exercise, principia bridge ideas, texts, authors, and institutions across time. Exploring the corpus of surviving principia illuminates the philosophical creativity cultivated in the faculties of theology. The papers in these volumes thus not only discuss the structural aspects of principia, but also treat the philosophical and theological ideas defended and attacked during the principial debates and the topics and imagery used in the speeches. The various chapters delve into the surviving material in a common attempt, firstly, to assemble pieces of evidence from Paris and Oxford into an image portraying how, when, and by whom the principia were performed in the first European universities. The second part illustrates the spread of the genre to the new faculties of theology in Central Europe and Italy, with case studies from Bologna, Cracow, Florence, Heidelberg, Prague, and Vienna, highlighting the pan-European diffusion of the practice. TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume I: Paris and Oxford Monica Brinzei and William O. Duba, Introduction Monica Brinzei, A Guide for Understanding Principia on the Sentences of Peter Lombard Paris William J. Courtenay, The Transformation of Sentential Principia in the Early Fourteenth Century Florian W ller, Inaugural Speeches by Bachelors of Theology Principial Collationes and their Transmission (1317-1319) Chris Schabel, Francis of Marchia on Instrumental Causality: The Conclusion to Principium in IV in Question 2 on IV Sentences Chris Schabel, The Genre Matures. Parisian Principia in the 1340s, from Gregory of Rimini to Pierre Ceffons Chris Schabel, The Forgotten Principia of a Forgotten Theologian: Jean de Moyenneville, 1356-1357, and Parisian Theology in the Late 1350s Alexandra Anisie, Mediated Knowledge and Beatific Vision in the First Principium of John of Brammart William J. Courtenay, Principial Cohorts at Paris Oxford Siegfried Wenzel, Introductory Lectures on the Sentences by ?Frisby? Michael Dunne, Between Old and New at Oxford: The Introitus Sententiarum of Richard FitzRalph and the First Collatio of Adam Wodeham Pascale Bermon, la recherche des Principia aux Questions sur les Sentences de Robert Holcot O.P. (? 1349) Chris Schabel, The Oxford Franciscan Robert Halifax's Principial Debate over Grace and Merit with His Pelagian Socius and Other Colleagues in 1332-133 Volume II: Blogona, Cracow, Florence, Heidelberg, Prague, and Vienna Bologna Chris Schabel, The Franciscan Guglielmo Centueri of Cremona's Bologna Principium of 1368, with an Appendix on Whether God Can Make the Past Not to Have Been Cracow Wojciech Baran, Survey on Medieval Principia on Peter Lombard's Sentences of Theologians from the University of Cracow Florence William O. Duba and Russell L. Friedman, A(nother) Florentine Principium on the Sentences. The Mystery of the Two "Prologues" in Peter of Trabibus' I Sentences Heidelberg Andrea Fiamma, John Wenck's Principia on the Sentences (1431) Prague Monica Brinzei, The Cistercian Matthew of Zbraslav (de Aula Regia / K nigsaal), Socius of a Pre-Radical Jan Hus, and Their Prague Principial Debate Vienna Edit Anna Luk cs, Pr cher sur les Sentences: sermons sur l'?uvre du Lombard la biblioth que des Dominicains de Vienne Ueli Zahnd, Disputing without Socii: The Principium on Book I of Conrad of Rothenburg, Vienna 1408/09 Matteo Esu, Peter of Pirkenwart's Textual Workshop from his Principium IV (1417) Matteo Esu and Ueli Zahnd, A joint Edition of Conrad of Rothenburg's and Peter of Pirchenwart's Principia on Book IV of the Sentences Index
Turnhout, Brepols, 2013 Hardback, approx. X+240 p., 156 x 234 mm. ISBN 9782503527956.
This is the first book to look closely at the contested reception of Peter Lombard?s Sentences and its eventual triumph at the Fourth Lateran Council. By placing Peter Lombard?s career and works within the broader frame of twelfth-century ideas, practice, and institutions, the author explores and contextualizes the controversies that attended the publication of the Sentences. At the same time, she also traces the growing popularity of the Sentences and its increasing prestige and importance among the literary elites of Northern Europe. The book argues that the allegations of error made against Lombard?s Christology and Trinitarian theology in the period between 1156 and 1215 must be understood in the longer history of intellectual controversy in the Schools of Northern Europe. In the trials of Berengar of Tours, Abelard, and Gilbert of Poitiers, the author uncovers a consistent tradition of critique within the schools that she shows to inform subsequent criticisms of Peter Lombard?s intellectual legacy. Concomitantly, she explores how responses made in support of the Sentences, against men such as Gerhoh of Reichersberg and Joachim of Fiore, consolidated the emerging canonical status of the work as a textbook in theology which is finally endorsed at Lateran IV. As such, this study challenges our understanding of the making of orthodoxy in the twelfth century. Language : English, Latin.
, Brepols, 2020 Hardback, xxii + 445 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Language: English. ISBN 9782503589091.
Summary The proceedings of the SIEPM Colloquium at Nijmegen published in this volume bring together new evidence for how the corpus of late-medieval commentaries on the Sentences, especially from the second half of the fourteenth century, contributed to the development of philosophical psychology within the discipline of theology. The relation among the faculties of the soul, the limits of knowledge, hylomorphism and the union of soul and body, intuitive and abstractive cognition, the immortality of the soul, the experience of the beatific vision, divine foreknowledge and the knowability of species are some of the topics involving psychological issues that are examined in this volume. The wealth of new information presented in this volume results from the interpretation of previously unexplored sources. The essays in this volume demonstrate that the various parts and Books of Peter Lombard's Sentences, the standard textbook of theology in the Middle Ages, provided lecturers and commentators with a variety of loci for the discussion of philosophical topics, from the principia (Denys of Montina), the Prologue (Alfonsus Vargas of Toledo, Hugolino of Orvieto, John Regis, Francis Toti of Perugia), Book I (Gregory of Rimini, John of Mirecourt, Pierre Ceffons, Hugolino of Orvieto, Pierre d'Ailly, Peter of Candia, the Vienna Group, John Capreolus, Henry of Gorkum, Denys the Carthusian), Book II (Pierre Ceffons, Peter of Candia, Guillaume de Vaurouillon, Gabriel Biel, Denys the Carthusian), and Book III (Heymericus de Campo). This diversity, within large works on theology conceived broadly, constitutes a tradition parallel to that found in commentaries on Aristotle's De anima in the late Middle Ages. TABLE OF CONTENTS Monica BR NZEI, Introduction Christopher D. SCHABEL, Note on the Vernacular Name of Richardus de Mediavilla : of 'Menneville', Not 'Middleton' I. HUMAN COGNITION Amos CORBINI, Notitia intuitiva and complexe significabile at Paris in the 1340s: From Alphonsus Vargas Toletanus to Peter Ceffons Aur lien ROBERT, The Possibility of Cognizing Material Substances. The Evolution of a Philosophical Problem in Late-Medieval Commentaries on the Sentences Jeffrey C. WITT, Peter Plaoul and Intuitive Knowledge II. THE HUMAN SOUL Maarten J.F.M. HOENEN, Heymericus de Campo (?1460) Reads Peter Lombard: Late-Medieval Abbreviations of the Libri Sententiarum Thomas JESCHKE, Unum antiquum problema: Denys the Carthusian and John Capreolus on the Question Whether the Soul's Essence Is Distinct from Its Potencies. A Late-Medieval Starting Point William DUBA and Olivier RIBORDY, The Human Soul: Definitions and Differentiae in Late-Medieval Commentaries on the Sentences Kent EMERY, Jr., Denys the Carthusian's Sentential Teachings on the Nature and Operations of the Soul III. THEOLOGICAL ISSUES John T. SLOTEMAKER, Pierre d'Ailly and the Imago Trinitatis: The Sources of His Trinitarian Theology Severin KITANOV, Freedom in Heaven: Peter of Candia's Treatment of the Necessity or Contingency of Beatific Enjoyment Christopher D. SCHABEL, Henry of Langenstein, Henry Totting of Oyta, Nicholas of Dinkelsb hl and the Vienna Group on Reconciling Human Free Will with Divine Foreknowledge Monica BR NZEI, Epilogue: Commentaries on the Sentences in Paris around 1370 Index of Manuscripts Index of Ancient and Medieval Names Index of Modern and Contemporary Authors
Turnhout, Brepols, 1998 Paperback, 166 pages., 140 x 210 mm. ISBN 9780888442857.
The six articles that comprise Book 2, Distinction 1, Quetion 1 of Aquinas' Writings on the 'Sentences' of Peter Lombard (Scriptum super libros Sententiarum Petri Lombardi) represent his earliest and most succinct account of creation. These texts contain the essential Thomistic doctrines on the subject, and are here translated into English for the first time, along with an introduction and analysis. Languages : English.
Brill NV 1994 900 pages in8. 1994. Cartonné jaquette. 2 volume(s). 900 pages.
Très bon état proche du neuf avec leur jaquette intérieur propre bonne tenue