Synopses & Reviews
The third volume of The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical Texts will allow access, for the first time in English, to major texts that form the debate over mind and knowledge at the center of medieval philosophy. Beginning with 13th-century attempts to classify the soul's powers and to explain the mind's place within the soul, the volume proceeds systematically to consider human knowledge, divine illumination, intentionality and mental representation. This volume will be an important resource for scholars and students of medieval philosophy, history, theology and literature.
Review
"All medievalists should applaud the excellent work of Pasnau in providing a fine collection of translations that make late medieval writings on philosophy of mind and epistemology accessible to twenty-first-century students and scholars. This volume offers us all ample evidence of the great strides made by the philosophers and theologians of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in the development of what we now know as 'cognitive science.'" Philosophy in Review
Synopsis
First-time English translations of texts on mind and knowledge at the centre of medieval philosophy.
Table of Contents
1. The soul and its powers Anonymous (arts master c.1225); 2. Questions on De anima I-II Anonymous (arts master c.1270); 3. Christ our one teacher Bonaventure; 4. Can a human being know anything (Summa quaestionum ordinariarum 1.1) Henry of Ghent; 5. Can a human being know anything without divine illumination? (Summa quaestionum ordinariarum 1.2) Henry of Ghent; 6. The mental word Peter John Olivi; 7. Intelligible being William Alnwick; 8. On intuitive and abstractive cognition (Scriptum, prooemium Q2) Peter Aureol; 9. Apparent being (Ordinatio I.27.3) William Ockham; 10. On the possibility of infallible knowledge (Sentences Q1) William Crathorn; 11. Can God know more than he knows? (Quodlibet I.6) Robert Holcot; 12. The objects of knowledge (Lectura secunda 1.1) Adam Wodeham.