Stufen von Univokation und Äquivokation. Walter Burley als Schiedsrichter in einer arabischen Debatte

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2021 ◽  
pp. 50-75
Author(s):  
Chiara Paladini

This paper focuses on the theory of divine ideas of Walter Burley (1275-1347). The medieval common theory of divine ideas, developed by Augustine, was intended to provide an answer to the question of the order and intelligibility of the world. The world is rationally organized since God created it according to the models existing eternally in his mind. Augustine's theory, however, left open problems such as reconciling the principle of God's unity with the plurality of ideas, the way in which ideas can or cannot be said to be eternal, their ontological status. Medieval authors discussed such questions until at least the late 14th century. By resorting to the semantic tool of connotation, Burley explains both in what way ‘idea' can signify the divine essence as much as the creatures (thereby reconciling the principle of God's unity with the multiplicity of ideas), and in what sense we can say that God has thought them from eternity, without slipping into a necessitarian view that undermines the principle of divine freedom. Moreover, by envisaging the objective mode of being as the only mode of being of ideas, he explains in what way they truly differ from one another on the basis of their different conceptual contents


Author(s):  
Claude Panaccio

Another lively debate of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth century that played a significant role in the development of the theory of mental language was the discussion over the object of logic as a science, and whether it is primarily concerned with thought or language. It was held by various philosophers that the structure of mental language is what logic deals with. But they did not all agree on what mental language was: some said (as Ockham would) that it is composed of concepts, others (such as Walter Burley) that it is composed of real external things, and others again (such as Richard Campsall) that it is composed of the mental representations of external words. This chapter reviews these various positions and the arguments which supported them.


2020 ◽  
pp. 2017-2022
Author(s):  
Marek Gensler
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