The medieval period in philosophy dates from the end of the Roman empire (5th century CE) to the European Renaissance (14th century CE), and is largely defined by Neoplatonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic philosophies.
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The doctrine that holds that human beings require a special divine assistance in their ordinary cognitive activities. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Robert Pasnau.
Resource maintained by Paul Vincent Spade at Indiana University.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia by Gyula Klima.
Survey of medieval accounts of analogical terms, which were thought to be particularly useful in metaphysics and theology, but were also discussed in commentaries on Aristotle's logic and in logic textbooks. From the Stanford Encyclopaedia, by E. Jennifer Ashworth.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Doug Langston.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Simo Knuuttila.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Anthony Celano.
The theories of proprietates terminorum was the basis of medieval semantic theory; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Stephen Read.
Survey of medieval views concerning the nature and ontological status of relations; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Jeffrey Brower.
Introductory essay from the Catholic Encyclopedia.
Article on this common form of medieval philosophical writing, by John Longeway. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Resource maintained by Paul Vincent Spade at Indiana University.
The doctrine that holds that human beings require a special divine assistance in their ordinary cognitive activities. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Robert Pasnau.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Anthony Celano.
Survey of medieval accounts of analogical terms, which were thought to be particularly useful in metaphysics and theology, but were also discussed in commentaries on Aristotle's logic and in logic textbooks. From the Stanford Encyclopaedia, by E. Jennifer Ashworth.
Survey of medieval views concerning the nature and ontological status of relations; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Jeffrey Brower.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Doug Langston.
Article on this common form of medieval philosophical writing, by John Longeway. From the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
The theories of proprietates terminorum was the basis of medieval semantic theory; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Stephen Read.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia by Gyula Klima.
Introductory essay from the Catholic Encyclopedia.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Simo Knuuttila.
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