The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical Texts

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The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical Texts

Volume 1

Logic and the Philosophy of Language. Ed. and translated Norman Kretzmann and Eleonore Stump. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1988.

Volume 1

Volume 3, Ethics and Political Philosophy (v. 2) [Paperback] ed. Arthur Stephen McGrade, John Kilcullen, Matthew Kempshall.

Volume 3

Mind and Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ed. Robert Pasnau.

  1. Anonymous (c.1225), The soul and its powers (ed. Gauthier)
  2. Anonymous (c.1265), Questions on De anima Book I-II (ed. Giele)
  3. Bonaventure, Christ our one teacher [Sermon IV: Opera Omnia V, 567-74]
  4. Henry of Ghent, Can a human being know anything? [Summa Quaestionum Ordinariarum 1.1]
  5. Henry of Ghent, Can a human being know anything without divine illumination? [Summa Quaestionum Ordinariarum 1.2]
  6. Peter John Olivi, The mental word [Lectura in Iohannem]
  7. William of Alnwick, Intelligible being [De esse intelligibili Q1]
  8. Peter Aureol, On intuitive and abstractive cognition [Commentary on Book I of the Sentences Prologue, Q2] Translated with Charles Bolyard
  9. William of Ockham, Apparent being [Ordinatio 27.3]
  10. William Crathorn, On the possibility of infallible knowledge [I Sent. Q1]
  11. Robert Holcot, Can God know more than he knows? [Quodlibet I.6]
  12. Adam Wodeham, The objects of knowledge [Lectura secunda I.1]