Antonius de Carlenis, O.P.: Four Questions on the Subalternation of the Sciences

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American Philosophical Society, 1994 - Science - 111 pages
Examines the theory of subalternation as it was developed by one of Paul of Venice's readers shortly before the mid-15th cent., the archbishop of Amalfi, Antonius de Carlenis de Neapoli. Contents: Intro.; Observations on the Manuscripts; Antonius de Carlenis de Neapoli, "Questiones in IV libros Sententiarum," Prologue, QQ. 1 and 2; "Questiones in libros I-II Analyticorum Posteriorum Aristotelis," L. I, QQ. 17,22; App. 1: Description of Oxford, Bodleian Lib., Canon, misc. 573; App. 2: Variant Incipit in the "Questiones in IV libros Sententiarum," Oxford, Bodleian Lib., Canon. misc. 573, fol. 172ra; App. 3: Tabula questionum. Antonius de Carlenis, "Questiones in libros I-II Analyticorum Posteriorum Aristotelis": Chicago, Newberry Lib., Case MS 97,5.
 

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Page viii - What Paris had been in the thirteenth century, what Oxford and Paris together had been in the fourteenth, Padua became in the fifteenth : the center in which ideas from all Europe were combined into an organized and cumulative body of knowledge.
Page 24 - Thomas in aliquo loco dicit theologiam esse scientiam subalternam, quod non intendit quod theologia sit sicut scientia subalterna quantum ad hoc quod scientia subalterna inventa ab homine habet processum scientificum, sed quantum ad hoc similitudinem cum ea.
Page xxxii - La questione della teologia come scienza in Gregorio da Rimini', Rivista di filosofia neo-scolastica 68 (1976): 610-44.
Page vii - seems to bear out the pessimistic judgment by both Duhem and Thorndike of the fifteenth century in comparison with that of the fourteenth.' This conclusion results from implication rather than explication by the author. One regret which will be felt by many readers is that Dr Clagett did not develop this thesis in further detail and by specific comparison rather than innuendo. Dr Clagett, formerly research assistant to Dr...
Page 6 - Alio modo accipitur pro illo habitu, qui aggeneratur in nobis ex Studio et sacra scriptura. Tertio modo accipitur pro illo habitu, qui deducitur ex veritatibus contentis in sacra scriptura. Quarto modo pro habitu declarativo et defensivo fidei » (Franciscus de Mayronis, In primum Sent.
Page 37 - Proof of the consequence: geometrical principles are proven in natural philosophy, as for example, that it is possible to draw a straight line between two points...
Page 26 - Ex primis autem est quod ex principiis propriis est ; idem enim dico primum et principium. Est autem principium demonstrationis propositio inmediata, inmediata autem est qua non est altéra prior.
Page xxx - Dominicus de Flandria OP (t 1479), sein Leben, seine Schriften, seine Bedeutung...
Page vii - ... arrangement. There are a few examples of a two-field township becoming a three-field2 and a few of two-field townships becoming four-field, but the nature of the evidence is such that only occasionally are there data for the same township at two different dates. The one change happened, according to Gray, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the other in the sixteenth and later centuries. It is possible that the two- and three-field systems had each different frequencies not only according...
Page 11 - Alio modo, potest accipi fides magis 10 stricte pro habitu quo assentimus alicui revelato absolute, non ut deducto ex alio...

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