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In: Classical texts
In: Duckworth classical, medieval and Renaissance editions
In: Arca 42
""Contents ""; ""Preface to This Edition ""; ""Preface to the Original Edition ""; ""Introduction ""; ""I. General Remarks ""; ""II. Notes on the Specific Selections ""; ""Part I. The will and intellect ""; ""Part II. The will and its inclinations ""; ""Part III. Moral goodness ""; ""Part IV. God and the moral law ""; ""Part V. The moral law in general ""; ""Part VI. The intellectual and moral virtues ""; ""Part VII. The love of God, self, and neighbor ""; ""Part VIII. Sin ""; ""Texts in Translation ""; ""Part I. The Will and Intellect ""; ""Part II. The Will and Its Inclinations
In: Notre Dame texts in medieval culture vol. 3
In: Collected works of Bernard Lonergan v. 25
In the mid- to late-1930s, while he was a student at the Gregorian University in Rome, Bernard Lonergan wrote a series of eight essays on the philosophy and theology of history. These essays foreshadow a number of the major themes in his life's work. The significance of these essays is enormous, not only for an understanding of the later trajectory of Lonergan's own work but also for the development of a contemporary systematic theology. In an important entry from 1965 in his archival papers, Lonergan wrote that the "mediated object" of systematics is Geschichte or the history that is lived and written about. In the same entry, he stated that the "doctrines" that this systematic theology would attempt to understand are focused on "redemption." The seeds of such a theology are planted in the current volume, where the formulae that are so pronounced in his later work first appear. Students of Lonergan's work will find their understanding of his philosophy profoundly affected by the essays in this volume
In: Studien und Texte zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters Band 132
In: Late Antiquity and Medieval Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2022
This work contains the Latin text of an early medieval commentary on the first three books of Aristotle's Ethics . The commentary appears here in print for the first time, supported by an introduction considering the significance of the work and the attribution of it to the Dominican author, Robert Kilwardby (c. 1215-1279). Celano argues that the commentary represents an early phase in the reception of Aristotle's Ethics in the thirteenth century, and that Kilwardby demonstrates a perceptive understanding of the meaning of Aristotle's moral philosophy, showing its importance for the curriculum in the Arts Faculties of universities in the Middle Ages
In: The classics of international law [2,2]
In: The publications of the Selden Society 132
"Anton Wilhelm Amo (c. 1703 - after 1752) is the first modern African philosopher to study and teach in a European university and write in the European philosophical tradition. We give an extensive historical and philosophical introduction to Amo's life and work, and provide Latin texts, with facing translations and explanatory notes, of Amo's two philosophical dissertations, On the Impassivity of the Human Mind and the Philosophical Disputation containing a Distinct Idea of those Things that Pertain either to the Mind or to our Living and Organic Body, both published in 1734. The Impassivity is an extended argument that the mind cannot be acted on, that sensation is a being-acted-on by the sensed object, and therefore that sensation does not belong to the mind, and must belong instead to the body The Distinct Idea works out the implications for the mind's actions, and tries to show how the mind understands, wills, and effects things through the body by 'intentions' which direct motions in our body intentionally toward external things. Both dissertations try to show how far each type of human act belongs to the mind, how far to the body, and expose and resolve earlier philosophers' self-contradictions on these questions"--