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This chapter argues that John Duns Scotus has several goals in the epistemology of theology: logical consistency, certainty, truth, and right praxis. The first section covers the natural knowledge of God, in which Scotus defends the claim that there are some non-complex univocal concepts, that they can be the building blocks of complex analogical ...
Scott M. Williams
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Original Sin according to John Duns Scotus
The article intends to offer a textual and evaluative presentation of the theory of original sin as elaborated by the Franciscan master John Duns Scotus.
Dezza E.
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It was probably in the winter of 1266 that a new scion was born to the Duns family of Berwickshire on the Scottish Borders; John3. Later, when he comes to take his place in the flourishing English Franciscan life, he will usually be called John of Scotland (‘Scotus’4) in order to distinguish him from other brethren of the same name.
John Duns Scotus
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The moderating will in John Duns Scotus
The thesis examines what counts as a moral act for John Duns Scotus when he considers the two innate affections (or propensities) of the will, the affection for the advantageous (affectio commode) and the affection for justice (affectio iustitiae). The affection for the advantageous inclines us to love an object as suitable to us.
Delahoossaye, Gerard
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