This book presents a series of studies by the late Marilyn McCord Adams of medieval philosophical and theological views regarding the powers that govern human psychological processes. She explores which of them were taken to be ours to exercise and control, and which to be controlled and exercised only by God.
This book presents a series of studies by the late Marilyn McCord Adams of medieval philosophical and theological views regarding the powers that govern human psychological processes. She explores which of them were taken to be ours to exercise and control, and which to be controlled and exercised only by God.
Marilyn McCord Adams was Regius Professor of Divinity and Canon of Christ Church from 2004-9, before returning to the USA to take up the post of Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2009-13), and then Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University (2013-15). Professor Adams' work in philosophy focused on the philosophy of religion, especially the problem of evil, philosophical theology, metaphysics, and medieval philosophy.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction and Cast of Characters * 1: Medieval Architecture of Matter, Form, and Powers * 2: Housing the Powers: Self-Actuation and Cosmic Design * 3: Debates about Potentialities and their Relations to Being * 4: with Cecilia Trifogli: Outsourcing the Subject: Whose Thought Is It? * 5: Outsourcing the Object: Divine Illumination. I: Early Franciscans and Henry of Ghent * 6: Outsourcing the Object: Divine Illumination. II: Henry of Ghent and Scotus * 7: Scotus and his Predecessors on the Metaphysics of Habits * 8: Genuine Agency, somehow Shared? The Holy Spirit and Other Gifts
* Introduction and Cast of Characters * 1: Medieval Architecture of Matter, Form, and Powers * 2: Housing the Powers: Self-Actuation and Cosmic Design * 3: Debates about Potentialities and their Relations to Being * 4: with Cecilia Trifogli: Outsourcing the Subject: Whose Thought Is It? * 5: Outsourcing the Object: Divine Illumination. I: Early Franciscans and Henry of Ghent * 6: Outsourcing the Object: Divine Illumination. II: Henry of Ghent and Scotus * 7: Scotus and his Predecessors on the Metaphysics of Habits * 8: Genuine Agency, somehow Shared? The Holy Spirit and Other Gifts
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