June 26, 2006
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A Little Extra Reading
In memory of
Mary Martin McLaughlin,
a scholar of Heloise and Abelard.
McLaughlin died on June 8, 2006."Following the parade, a speech is given by Charles Williams, based on his book The Place of the Lion.
Williams explains the true meaning of the word 'realism' in both
philosophy and theology. His guard of honor, bayonets gleaming, is led
by William of Ockham."A review by John D. Burlinson of Charles Williams's novel The Place of the Lion:
"... a little extra reading regarding Abelard's take on 'universals' might
add a little extra spice-- since Abelard is the subject of the
heroine's ... doctoral dissertation. I'd suggest the
article 'The Medieval Problem of Universals' in the online Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy."Michael L. Czapkay, a student of philosophical theology at Oxford:
"The development of logic in the schools and universities
of western Europe between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries constituted
a significant contribution to the history of philosophy. But no less
significant was the influence of this development of logic on medieval
theology. It provided the necessary conceptual apparatus for the
systematization of theology. Abelard, Ockham, and Thomas Aquinas are
paradigm cases of the extent to which logic played an active role in the
systematic formulation of Christian theology. In fact, at certain points,
for instance in modal logic, logical concepts were intimately related to
theological problems, such as God's knowledge of future contingent
truths."
The Medieval Problem of Universals, by Fordham's Gyula Klima, 2004:
"... for Abelard, a status is an object of the divine mind,
whereby God preconceives the state of his creation from
eternity."
