Results 1 to 10 of about 679 (137)

A Certain Seminal Character of Profit which We Commonly Call “Capital”: Peter of John Olivi and the Tractatus de contractibus [PDF]

open access: bronzeJournal for Markets and Ethics, 2018
Abstract Tractatus de contractibus shows that there are mainly three fundamental economic views that characterize the originality and the acuteness of Olivi’s thought: a subject-based theory of value, a theory of just price, and the theoretical-systematic use of the concept of capital.
Giuseppe Franco, Peter Nickl
semanticscholar   +4 more sources

Attribution arguments and the metaphysics of immanent actions: cognitive acts from Peter John Olivi to Durand of St. Pourçain [PDF]

open access: hybridBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy
In this paper, I survey one of the key arguments used in Latin medieval psychology in favour of active views of cognition, from Peter John Olivi to Durand of St. Pourҁain.
André Martin
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

What Does a Habitus of the Soul Do? The Case of the Habitus of Faith in Bonaventure, Peter John Olivi and John Duns Scotus [PDF]

open access: closed, 2018
While a habitus can be described as a disposition towards a certain type of act, such a definition is not sufficient to encompass the diversity of uses the medieval thinkers made of this concept. It is the aim of this paper to examine the habitus of faith in the voluntarist Franciscan tradition in order to illustrate several of its functions and how ...
Nicolas Faucher
semanticscholar   +4 more sources

Atenção e cognição em Pedro de João Olivi = Attention and cognition in Peter of John Oliv

open access: greenVeritas, 2018
Pedro de João Olivi (1247/8-1298) sustenta que a atenção intencional tem de ser posta como a condição para o desempenho ativo do ato cognitivo perceptual. A intencionalidade é um componente natural da apreensão sensorial.
Cenci, Márcio Paulo
doaj   +2 more sources

Robert Grosseteste, Peter John Olivi and John Duns Scotus on Freedom of the Will

open access: diamondRevista Española de Filosofía Medieval
Duns Scotus’s claim that the will, both human and divine, has a capacity for opposites at a single instant has been seen as a turning point in the history of modality. But historians have discovered anticipations of Scotus’s position in Robert Grosseteste and Peter John Olivi.
John Marenbon
openalex   +5 more sources

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