John Mair, Scotland's leading theologian in the half-century prior to the Scottish Reformation, argued that an assent of faith requires a movement not only of the intellect but also of the will, and that, to that extent, the assent of faith is subject to voluntary control and is therefore a free act. Mair's argument is expounded and analysed, and attention is paid to his relationship to his great predecessor John Duns Scotus
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645) has gained a reputation as a figure of controvers...
De Halleux André. Alan P.F. Sell, Defending and Declaring the Faith. Some Scottish Examples, 1860-19...
A variety of studies describe and explain the development of the ways in which the relationship betw...
Are faith and knowledge mutually incompatible in the sense that it is not possible for someone both ...
John Mair (c.1467-1550), major Scottish philosopher, logician and theologian of the Pre-Reformation ...
Straddling over a millennium of theological work, these essays explore the beginnings of Scottish th...
The ways in which the Reformation began and developed in England and Scotland were distinct and led ...
Van Riet Georges. Francis Martin Tyrrell, The Role of Assent in Judgment. A Thomistic Study. In: Rev...
To what extent does Scots law recognise an action for recovery of moveable property based on the own...
Le Bras Gabriel. John Thomas Mc Neill, The Celtic Penitentials and their influence on Continental Ch...
This study investigated one central aspect of the political views of John Withexspoon: His steadfast...
Many late medieval thinkers gave an account of the assent of faith in terms of the exercise of reaso...
The central theme of my thesis is the nature of assent as expounded in late-medieval epistemology an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines Giles of Rome's theory of the will. Reg...
The transition from medieval thought to what we usually consider as modem philosophy is a breakthrou...
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645) has gained a reputation as a figure of controvers...
De Halleux André. Alan P.F. Sell, Defending and Declaring the Faith. Some Scottish Examples, 1860-19...
A variety of studies describe and explain the development of the ways in which the relationship betw...
Are faith and knowledge mutually incompatible in the sense that it is not possible for someone both ...
John Mair (c.1467-1550), major Scottish philosopher, logician and theologian of the Pre-Reformation ...
Straddling over a millennium of theological work, these essays explore the beginnings of Scottish th...
The ways in which the Reformation began and developed in England and Scotland were distinct and led ...
Van Riet Georges. Francis Martin Tyrrell, The Role of Assent in Judgment. A Thomistic Study. In: Rev...
To what extent does Scots law recognise an action for recovery of moveable property based on the own...
Le Bras Gabriel. John Thomas Mc Neill, The Celtic Penitentials and their influence on Continental Ch...
This study investigated one central aspect of the political views of John Withexspoon: His steadfast...
Many late medieval thinkers gave an account of the assent of faith in terms of the exercise of reaso...
The central theme of my thesis is the nature of assent as expounded in late-medieval epistemology an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines Giles of Rome's theory of the will. Reg...
The transition from medieval thought to what we usually consider as modem philosophy is a breakthrou...
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645) has gained a reputation as a figure of controvers...
De Halleux André. Alan P.F. Sell, Defending and Declaring the Faith. Some Scottish Examples, 1860-19...
A variety of studies describe and explain the development of the ways in which the relationship betw...