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Individuals and Institutions in Medieval Scholasticism: Cover

Individuals and Institutions in Medieval Scholasticism
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgements
  6. List of abbreviations
  7. Notes on contributors
  8. Introduction: individuals and institutions in medieval scholasticism
  9. I. Individuals and intellectual traditions: construction and criticism
    1. 1. The fathers of scholasticism: authorities as totems
    2. 2. The unicity of substantial form in the Correctoria corruptorii fratris Thomae of Richard Knapwell, Robert Orford and John of Paris
    3. 3. Italian universities, arts masters and interpreting
    4. 4. Individual and institution in scholastic historiography: Nicholas Trevet
  10. II. Institutions and individuals: organizations and social practices
    1. a. Individuals and organizations
      1. 5. The charismatic leader and the vita religiosa: some observations about an apparent contradiction between individual and institution
      2. 6. An institution made of individuals: Peter John Olivi and Angelo Clareno on the Franciscan experience
      3. 7. Rolando of Cremona and the earliest inquisition depositions of Languedoc
    2. b. Individuals and practices
      1. 8. Robert of Courson’s systematic thinking about early thirteenth-century institutions
      2. 9. ‘Better to let scandal arise than to relinquish the truth’: the cases of conscience of the masters of Paris in the thirteenth century
      3. 10. Of parish priests and hermaphrodites: Robert Holcot’s discussion of Omnis utriusque sexus
      4. 11. The cult of the marriage of Joseph and Mary: the shaping of doctrinal novelty in Jean Gerson’s Josephina (1414–17)
  11. Afterword
  12. Index

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Text © Antonia Fitzpatrick and John Sabapathy 2020
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