PL 407 HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY Spring 2012

Similar documents
PL 406 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY Fall 2009

Syllabus Medieval Philosophy PHL 262--Spring 2010 Michael R. Baumer, Course Instructor MW 4:00 to 5:50 Main Campus, Main Classroom Building, Room 326

Syllabus Medieval Philosophy PHL 262--Spring 2011 Michael R. Baumer, Course Instructor MWF 1:30-2:35 Main Campus, Main Classroom Building, Room 305

Sep. 1 Wed Introduction to the Middle Ages Dates; major thinkers; and historical context The nature of scripture (Revelation) and reason

PHIL 370: Medieval Philosophy [semester], Coastal Carolina University Class meeting times: [date, time, location]

Faith and Reason in the Middle Ages (BLHS 105) Fall 2018

#CCMP: McGrade 1-8 (on contemporary study of medieval philosophy); Marrone (on the historical context of medieval philosophy)

Comparative Political Philosophy: Islam and the West Political Science (intermediate-level seminar)

Philosophy Quiz 01 Introduction

REVIEW. St. Thomas Aquinas. By RALPH MCINERNY. The University of Notre Dame Press 1982 (reprint of Twayne Publishers 1977). Pp $5.95.

PHILOSOPHY AS THE HANDMAID OF RELIGION LECTURE 2/ PHI. OF THEO.

CONTENTS PART I PRE-MEDIAEVAL INFLUENCES

Framingham State University Syllabus PHIL 101-B Invitation to Philosophy Summer 2018

PHIL U282: FREE WILL AND DETERMINISM Loyola University of New Orleans, Fall 2016, Dr. Ben Bayer

Syllabus PHIL 1000 Philosophy of Human Nature Summer 2017, Tues/Wed/Thurs 9:00-12:00pm Location: TBD

Culture and Belief 31 Saints, Heretics and Atheists: An Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion Spring 2015 Syllabus

Introduction to Ethics Part 2: History of Ethics. SMSU Spring 2005 Professor Douglas F. Olena

ST504: History of Philosophy and Christian Thought. 3 hours Tuesdays: 1:00-3:55 pm

HIST5200 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY: EARLY - MEDIEVAL New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary

COURSE SYLLABUS. Course Description

Rosen Educational Services materials copyright 2011 Rosen Educational Services, LLC. All rights reserved.

Christianity & Philosophy

Scholasticism I INTRODUCTION

Medieval Thought February Medieval Thought

(add 'PHIL 3400' to subject line) Course Webpages: Moodle login page

ISLAMIC PHILOSOPHY. Office: Coleman 64 Phone: x Office hours: MW 12:30-2 pm, or by appointment

RELI 2310A: Islam. Office Hours: Wednesdays 11-1, Office Phone: (613) , ext or by appointment

Philosophy 301L: Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2011

FAITH AND REASON IN THE MIDDLE AGES (BLHS 105) Professors Paasch, McNamer and Ray Syllabus, Fall 2015

CHURCH HISTORY I CHURCH HISTORY TO THE REFORMATION

Theories of the Self. Description:

PHIL 1313 Introduction to Philosophy Section 09 Fall 2014 Philosophy Department

Aristotle. Aristotle was an ancient Greek Philosopher who made contributions to logic, physics, the

FAITH AND REASON IN THE MIDDLE AGES (BLHS 105) Professors Lamm, Paasch, and Ray Syllabus, Spring 2014 (Provisional)

Introduction to Islam

INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY Brandeis University Fall 2015 Professor Andreas Teuber

Curriculum Vitae. Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Syracuse University, August 2008

An Introduction to Medieval Christian Philosophy. by Jeremiah Joven Joaquin 1

Development of Thought. The word "philosophy" comes from the Ancient Greek philosophia, which

Philosophy 107: Philosophy of Religion El Camino College Summer, 2016 Section 4173, Online Course

AS : Introduction to Philosophy T, Th, F 1:00-3:15

Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology PH/HS 1050 History of Philosophy: Ancient

INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY

X/$ c Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 2004 AQUINAS S VIEWS ON MIND AND SOUL: ECHOES OF PLATONISM. Patrick Quinn

3. Understand the history of the creeds and ecumenical councils.

This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-library, Routledge is an International Thomson Publishing company

NOTRE DAME SEMINARY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY

John Duns Scotus. 1. His Life and Works. Handout 24. called The Subtle Doctor. born in 1265 (or 1266) in Scotland; died in Cologne in 1308

Philosophy 221/Political Science 221 Philosophical Foundations of the American Revolution

A-LEVEL Religious Studies

Summer 2016 Course of Study, Claremont School of Theology COS 222: THEOLOGICAL HERITAGE II: EARLY CHURCH

Department of Theology and Philosophy

Chapter X. Course Modules. for the. Programmes. in the. Faculty of Philosophy

UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES CERTIFICATE IN PHILOSOPHY (CERTIFICATES)

2019 Course of Study, Claremont School of Theology

THE PRINCIPLE OF ANALOGY IN PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC THEOLOGY

Aquinas's Summa Theologiae (Critical Essays On The Classics Series) READ ONLINE

DOMINICAN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

Course Number: PHS 541 Course Title: Natural Theology Term: Summer Instructor Dr. Randall Colton,

DRAFT THIS IS NOT THE FINAL SYLLABUS

OTTAWA ONLINE PHL Basic Issues in Philosophy

GB 5423 Historical Theology I Fall 2014 (Online) Dr. John Mark Hicks

Required Reading: 1. Corrigan, et al. Jews, Christians, Muslims. NJ: Prentice Hall, Individual readings on Blackboard.

GB 5423 Historical Theology I Spring 2012 Dr. John Mark Hicks

PHILOSOPHY 2 Philosophical Ethics

Al-Ghazali and Epistemology

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Tuesday 1-3, Wednesday 1-3, and by appointment

270 Now that we have settled these issues, we should answer the first question [n.

CURRICULUM VITAE of Joshua Hoffman. Department of Philosophy, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, N.C.,

From Aristotle s Ousia to Ibn Sina s Jawhar

PHIL 100 AO1 Introduction to Philosophy

History of Political Thought I: Justice, Virtue, and the Soul

Assessment: Student accomplishment of expected student outcomes will be assessed using the following measures

Philosophy of Religion PHIL (CRN 22046) RELG (CRN 22047) Spring 2014 T 5:00-6:15 Kinard 205

PSCI 4809/5309. CONCEPTS OF POLITICAL COMMUNITY II (Fridays 8:35-11:25 am. Please confirm location on Carleton Central)

Prerequisites: CORE 1101, ENGL 1201, ENGL 1202

Jewish and Muslim Thinkers in the Islamic World: Three Parallels. Peter Adamson (LMU Munich)

METAPHYSICS splittest.com METAPHYSICS. page 1 / 5

HSC EXAMINATION REPORT. Studies of Religion

Introduction: reading Boethius whole

Introducing Greek Philosophy

Greek natural philosophy and the Christian Tradition

AKC Lecture 1 Plato, Penrose, Popper

Knowledge, Reality, and Values CORC 1210 SYLLABUS

Wesley Theological Seminary Course of Study School Summer Intensive Term 1 July 9 - July 19, 2019

THE RISE OF SCHOLASTIC LEGAL PHILOSOPHY

WAYLAND BAPTIST UNIVERSITY VIRTUAL CAMPUS SCHOOL OF RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY

Enlightenment between Islam and the European West

Shanghai Jiao Tong University. PI900 Introduction to Western Philosophy

Philosophy 3020: Modern Philosophy. UNC Charlotte, Spring Section 001, M/W 11:00am-12:15pm, Winningham 101

PURDUE UNIVERSITY School of Interdisciplinary Studies Jewish Studies

You may not start to read the questions printed on the subsequent pages of this question paper until instructed that you may do so by the Invigilator

The Letter to the Galatians Trinity School for Ministry June term Rev. Dr. Orrey McFarland

Chapter 3. Classical Antiquity: Hellenistic ( BCE) & Roman (31 BCE CE) Worlds

WESTERN INTELLECTUAL AND RELIGIOUS HISTORY TO 1500

Syllabus El Camino College: Ancient and Medieval Philosophy (PHIL-10, Section # 2561, Fall, 2013, T & Th., 11:15 a.m.-12:40 p.m.

CHRISTIAN THEOLOGIANS /PHILOSOPHERS VIEW OF OMNISCIENCE AND HUMAN FREEDOM

Introduction to Philosophy Philosophy 110 CRN Sec 018 Fall Term 2009 Purdue University Instructor: Daniel Kelly

CMN 3010 Introduction to Christian Theology May 16-19, 2016

UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY. Philosophy 331 Fall 2008 Philosophy of Religion

Transcription:

PL 407 HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY Spring 2012 DAY / TIME : T & TH 12:00-1:15 P.M. PROFESSOR : J.-L. SOLÈRE COURSE DESCRIPTION : Far from being monolithic and repetitive, the Middle Ages were a creative period during which multiple solutions were proposed to make sense of the world and of human life. The legacy of Antiquity, the philosophic and scientific knowledge of the time, and religious views were combined in original syntheses. The aim of the course is to provide an accurate image of the resulting diversity of theories. We will study the main topics that were strenuously debated during a good thousand years. This will be an opportunity to read a wide range of authors (Christian thinkers from St. Augustine to Ockham, but also Islamic and Jewish philosophers). Medieval philosophy was an important step in the development of human thought. Discovering it will be essential to your philosophical education. This course will especially highlight the essential concepts that were formed in the Middle Ages and that have been transmitted to modern philosophy, in metaphysics, theory of knowledge and consciousness, ethics, etc. In addition, analysis of texts, debates and writing assignments will help you to develop rigorous argumentation and expression skills. READINGS : Required textbooks: D. Kolak & G. Thomson, The Longman Standard History of Medieval Philosophy, 2008, ISBN 0-321-23514-2; Armand Maurer, Medieval Philosophy. An Introduction, 2 nd edition, 1982, ISBN 0-88844-704-3. Some other primary sources will be photocopied or digitized. The course has a Blackboard site which provides various complementary information and materials. As Medieval authors very often refer to Ancient authors and prolong their lines of thought, studying philosophy in Middle Ages will be easier if you have some knowledge of philosophy in Antiquity. I thus advise you to consult: the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, online version in the library databases, or printed: O'Neill B51.R68 1998,

and/or the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (online and free) when you need some information about Ancient philosophy: authors, e.g. Porphyry or Simplicius; topics, e.g. Immortality or Substance ; concepts, e.g Nous or Pneuma, etc. Besides, as you will see in the syllabus, the reading of some articles in these encyclopedias is required. OFFICE HOURS W 4:30-6:00, Maloney Hall 390. Tel.: 617-552-4670. I am also most often in my office on T and TH afternoon, or we can make an appointment. I do not respond by email to course questions, but I ll be glad to talk to you. CLASS POLICY Texts assigned in the syllabus must be studied before the class, with the help of the study questions at the end of each selection in the textbook. Attendance: Students are expected to attend classes regularly, take tests, and submit papers and other work at the times specified by the professor on the course syllabus. Students who are absent repeatedly from class or practica will be evaluated by faculty responsible for the course to ascertain their ability to achieve the course objectives and to continue in the course (from BC Academic Regulations). Academic integrity: see www.bc.edu/offices/stserv/academic/integrity.html. Plagiarism is a form of fraud and will be punished as such. The definition of plagiarism includes not only turning in someone else's work as your own or copying sentences without the appropriate quotation conventions, but also paraphrasing (that is, changing the words while reproducing the sentence structure or the ideas of someone else) without giving credit to the source. This applies to any material found on the Internet. For the appropriate forms of quotation, see www.plagiarism.org. COURSE CREDIT Four papers (after parts I, II, III-IV and V of the course) will each count for 25% of the final grade. Class participation: bonus added to the average resulting from the papers (4 pts maximum). Grades in this course mean the following: A: Exceptional work, unusual in how well it fulfills the assignment * B: Strong work that fulfills the assignment 2

C: Good work that adequately fulfills most of the assignment D: Work that inadequately addresses much of the assignment F: Work that fails to address most of the assignment Numerical scale: D- 60-63 D 64-67 D+ 68-69 C- 70-73 C 74-76 C+ 77-79 B- 80-83 B 84-87 B+ 88-90 A- 91-95* A 96-100* * I urge you to use these top grades only for truly outstanding work (BC A&S Dean to the faculty). SYLLABUS Abbreviations: LS = The Longman Standard History of Medieval Philosophy (textbook) Maurer = Armand Maurer, Medieval Philosophy (textbook) phot. = photocopies REP = Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy (online, library database) SEP = Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (online, free) Req. = required readings Opt.* = optional but strongly recommended readings Opt. = optional readings Jan. 17 Class 1: Introduction Jan. 19 Class 2: Historical sketch, part 1 Req.: Aristotle #7-19 in REP. Opt.*: Aristotle Commentators, Forms, platonic, Neoplatonism, Platonism, Plotinus in REP. Jan. 24 Class 3: Historical sketch, part 2 Req.: P.V. Spade, The Greek background (phot.). Opt.: Greek Philosophy: impact on Islamic Philosophy, Islamic philosophy: transmission into Western Europe in REP. 3

I DEBATES ON REVELATION AND REASON Jan. 26 Class 4: Req.: Justin, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian (phot.); Augustine, The City of God, VIII, chap. 1-12 (phot.); Maimonides, Guide for the Perplexed (LS pp. 249-258). Maurer pp. 3-5, 106-109. Opt.: Patristic Philosophy in REP. Jan. 31 Class 5: Req.: Al-Ghazzali, Deliverance From Error (phot.), The Incoherence of the Philosophers (LS p.189-192 + phot.). Al-Ghazali in SEP; Maurer pp. 15-16. Opt.*: Causality and necessity in Islamic thought in REP. Opt.: Ash ariyya and Mu tazila, Neoplatonism in Islamic Philosophy in REP. Feb. 2 Class 6: Req.: Averroes, The Incoherence of the Incoherence, About the natural sciences (LS pp. 229-239). Maurer pp. 100-102. Opt.*: Natural philosophy, medieval, #6: The Aristotelian Cosmos, in REP. Feb. 7 Class 7: Req.: Erigena, Philosophy, Faith and Reason (phot.); Roger Bacon, Opus Maius (LS pp. 303-344); Stephen Tempier, Condemnation of 1277 (phot.). Maurer pp. 35-37, 47-49, 59-61, 85-92, 127-134, 137-141, 152-156, 163-166, 192-194, 199-207. Opt.: Condemnation of 1277 in SEP. Feb. 9 Class 8: Debate. II DEBATES ON THE NATURE OF HUMAN BEINGS II.1 THE SOUL Feb. 14 Class 9: Req.: Augustine, The City of God, XI, chap. 26, On The Trinity, chap. 6-12 (LS pp. 28-34); Ockham, Quodlibet II q. 12 and Quodl. I q. 14 (LS 394b-397a); Avicenna, Concerning the 4

Soul, chap, 1-13 (LS pp. 171-179), Erigena, On The Division of Nature, IV, chap. 7-9 (LS pp. 99-113). Maurer pp. 8-10, 37-39, 42-46. Opt.: Soul in Islamic philosophy in REP. Feb. 16 Class 10: Req.: Aquinas, On Being and Essence, chap. 2 (LS pp. 288-292). Maurer pp. 179-182, 213-216. Feb. 21 Class 11: Req.: Aquinas, Summa Contra Gentiles, II, chap. 57-58 (LS pp. 263-265b), 65-68 (LS pp. 269-271), 79-81 (LS pp. 281a-285). Feb. 23 Class 12: Debate. II.2 THE INTELLECT Feb. 28 Class 13: Req.: Al-Farabi, The Letter Concerning the Intellect (phot.); Averroes, Commentary on On The Soul (LS pp. 239-248). Arabic and Islamic Psychology and Philosophy of Mind in SEP. Opt.: Alexander of Aphrodisias, Themistius, Ibn Bajja, Ibn Tufayl in REP.. March 1 Class 14: Req.: Aquinas, Summa Contra Gentiles, II, chap. 59-62 (LS pp. 265b-269a), 69-73 (LS pp. 271a-275a), 75-77 (LS pp. 276b-281a). Maurer pp. 182-185. Opt.*: Averroism in REP. SPRING BREAK March 13 Class 15: Req. : Augustine, On Free Will, II, chap. III-XVII (LS pp. 38-56); Scotus, Oxford Commentary on the Sentences, I, d. III, q. 4 (LS pp. 346-361). Maurer pp. 5-8, 10-12, 148-151, 217-222. Opt.*: Illumination in REP; Divine illumination in SEP. 5

III DEBATES ON THE HUMAN KNOWLEDGE OF THINGS March 15 Class 16: Req. : Boethius, Commentary on Porphyry s Isagoge, 2 nd ed. (LS pp. 76-88); Abelard, Glosses On Porphry (LS pp. 129-148); John of Salisbury, Metalogicon (LS pp. 155-157). Maurer pp. 27-32, 61-68. Opt.*: Medieval Problem of Universals in SEP. March 20 Class 17: Req. : Avicenna, Metaphysics, The Nature of universals (LS pp. 179-182); Scotus, Ordinatio II, d. III pt. 1, qq. 1 & 6, & Commentary on Aristotle s Metaphysics, VII, q. 18 (LS pp. 361-375). Maurer pp. 98, 233-236. Opt.*: Duns Scotus, #12, in REP. Opt.: Medieval Theories of Haecceity in SEP. March 22 Class 18: Req. : Ockham, Sum of Logic I, chap. 14-16 & Quodlibet I q. 13 (LS pp. 375-384b). Maurer pp. 277-291, 362-365. Opt.*: Nominalism, #2 in REP. March 27 Class 19: Debate. IV DEBATES ON THE HUMAN KNOWLEDGE OF GOD March 29 Class 20: Req. : Anselm of Canterbury Proslogion (LS pp. 113-121). Maurer pp. 49-54. Opt.: Ontological arguments in SEP. April 3 Class 21: Req. : Avicenna, Metaphysics (LS pp. 182-188) ; Aquinas, Sum of Theology (LS pp. 285-287). Maurer pp. 94-98, 166-168, 222-227, 269-270. Opt.: God, arguments for the existence of in REP. 6

April 10 Class 22: Req. : Aquinas, On Being and Essence, chap. 4-5 (LS pp. 293b-297b); Pseudo-Dionysius, On the Divine Names, chap. I, II, IV 19-34 (phot.) ; Nicholas of Cusa, On Learned Ignorance, chap. 1-4 (LS pp. 407-413). Maurer pp. 168-171, 175-179, 227-230, 271-275, 310-324, 359-362. Opt.*: Pseudo-Dionusius the Areopagite in SEP. Opt.: Negative theology in REP. April 12 Class 23: Debate. V DEBATES ON GOD AND THE CREATION V.1 -- DVINE FOREKNOWLEDGE AND HUMAN FREE WILL April 17 Class 24: Req. : Augustine, Against the Manicheans and Enchiridion (LS pp. 20-27), On Free Will, II, chap. I-II (LS pp. 34-38); Scotus Oxford Commentary, I, d. 39 (phot.). Maurer pp. 56-58, 185-189; Duns Scotus #14 in REP. Opt.: Free will in SEP. April 19 Class 25: Req. : Boethius Consolation of Philosophy, V (LS pp. 88-97) ; Luis de Molina, Concordia, IV (phot.). Maurer pp. 32-33; Foreknowledge and Free Will in SEP. Opt.: Medieval Theories of Future Contingents in SEP. April 24 Class 26: Req. : Peter Damian, On Divine Omnipotence (phot.). Peter Damian in SEP. Opt.: Omnipotence in REP. 7

V.2 DID THE WORLD HAVE A BEGINNING? April 26 Class 27: Req. : Augustine, Confessions XI (LS pp. 63b-74) ; Averroes, The Incoherence of the Incoherence, First discussion (LS pp. 205-225b). Opt.*: Eternity of the world, medieval views of in REP. May 1 Class 28: Req. : Siger of Brabant, Questions on the Eternity of the World (phot.); Aquinas (phot.). Maurer pp. 141-142, 171-175. May 3 Class 29: Debate. 8