Part of a series on |
John Duns Scotus |
---|
ScotismScholasticism Univocity Haecceity Immaculate Conception Beatific vision Formal distinction Hylomorphism Scotistic realism Substance theory (ousia) Accident Substantial form Quiddity (essence / nature) Individuation Existence of God Christology Platonic realism Categories (Aristotle) Problem of universals Metaphysics Christianity and slavery |
WorksOpus Oxoniense Tractatus de Primo Principio Quaestiones Quodlibetales |
InfluencesAristotle ("The Philosopher") St. Paul ("The Apostle") Pseudo-Dionysius St. Augustine ("The Theologian") St. Boethius Avicenna Peter Lombard ("The Master") Averroes ("The Commentator") Maimonides ("Rabbi Moses") St. Albertus Magnus ("The Universal Doctor") St. Thomas Aquinas ("The Angelic Doctor") |
People |
RelatedAristotelianism Franciscan Order Oxford University Catholic theology List of Franciscan theologians Empiricism |
Catholicism Portal |
Antonius Andreas (c. 1280 in Tauste, Aragon – 1320) was a Spanish Franciscan theologian, a pupil of Duns Scotus.
He was teaching at the University of Lleida in 1315. He was nicknamed Doctor Dulcifluus, or Doctor Scotellus (applied as well to Peter of Aquila).
His Quaestiones super XII libros Metaphysicae Aristotelis was printed in 1481.
Notes
- Andreae, Andrea, Antonio Andreas, Antonius Andreae, Antonio Andrea, Antonio Andrés, Antoni Andreu.
- History of Philosophy 41
- Catalan philosophy: From the beginning of the academic philosophy until the Aristotelian reaction in the 15th century
Bibliography
- Marek Gensler, The making of Doctor Dulcifluus. Antonius Andreae's contribution to the formation of Scotism, Anuari de la Societat Catalana de Filosofia 1996, pp. 57–67.
External links
- Franaut page: Antonius Andreae
- Marek Gensler, The making of a Doctor Dulcifluus
- Against ordination of women
This Catholic Church–related biographical article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
This biographical article about a Spanish religious figure is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |