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Analogical Concepts: The Fourteenth-Century Background to Cajetan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 April 2010
Extract
In 1498 Cajetan published a short book, On the Analogy of Names, which is often regarded as a masterly summary of Aquinas's doctrine of analogy. It opens in the very first paragraph with an attack on three views of the concept of being (ens): first, that it is a disjunction of concepts; second, that it is an ordered group of concepts; and third, that it is a single, separate concept which is unequally participated by substances and accidents. A number of questions immediately spring to mind. Why are concepts being discussed when analogy is said by Cajetan to be a theory of language? What is meant by ‘concept’? Who held the views under attack and why? So far as I can tell, the extensive literature on both Aquinas and Cajetan offers no satisfactory answers to these questions.
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- Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review / Revue canadienne de philosophie , Volume 31 , Issue 3: Philosophy in the Fourteenth Century , Summer 1992 , pp. 399 - 414
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- Copyright © Canadian Philosophical Association 1992
References
Notes
1 See Pinchard, Bruno, Métaphysique et sémantique. Autour de Cajetan. Étude [texte] et traduction du “De Nominum Analogia” (Paris: Vrin, 1987), p. 114Google Scholar. The text has “indisiunctionis,” but this has to be wrong: cf. p. 133, par. 71, where Cajetan once more lists the three views, beginning with “conceptum disiunctum.” Pinchard wrongly suggests (p. 152, par. 1, n. 5) that the latter text should be emended.
2 Notably Johannes Capreolus (d. 1444), Dominic of Flanders (d. 1479), and Paulus Soncinas (d. 1494).
3 For full bibliographies and more information on the matters touched on here, see Ashworth, E. J., “Signification and Modes of Signifying in Thirteenth-Century Logic: A Preface to Aquinas on Analogy,” Medieval Philosophy and Theology, 1 (1991): 39–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar; E. J. Ashworth, “Analogy and Equivocation in Thirteenth-Century Logic: Aquinas in Context,” Mediaeval Studies (forthcoming); Ashworth, E. J., “Equivocation and Analogy in Fourteenth Century Logic: Ockham, Burley and Buridan,” in Mojsisch, B. and Pluta, O., eds., Historia Philosophiae Medii Aevi: Studien zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters (Amsterdam: B. R. Grüner, 1991), Vol. 1, p. 23–43.Google Scholar
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5 I have borrowed nearly all of this translation from the translation of Peter of Spain by Kretzmann, N. and Stump, E., The Cambridge Translations of Medieval Philosophical Texts, Vol. 1: Logic and the Philosophy of Language (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), p. 89.Google Scholar
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13 Henry of Ghent, Summae Quaestionum Ordinariarum (rpt. of the 1520 edition), 2 vols., Franciscan Institute Publications, Text Series No. 5 (St. Bonaventure, NY, and Louvain, Belgium: Paderborn, 1953), Vol. 1, f. cxxiiii r.
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16 Simplicius, Commentaire, p. 43.
17 “In genere multe latent equivocationes,” in Walter Burley, 1337 Commentary on the Categories, in Burlei super artem veterem Porphirii et Aristotelis (Venetiis, 1497), sig. c 5 ra. Cf. Ockham, , Quaestiones in librum Tertium Sententiarum (Reportatio), edited by Kelley, F. E. and Etzkorn, G. I., Opera Theologica VI (St. Bonaventure, NY: St. Bonaventure University, 1982), p. 338.Google Scholar
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23 Aquinas, Super Evangelium S. Ioannis Lectura 1.1 n. 25; De veritate 4.2; De potentia 8.1.
24 Aquinas, “Ratio enim quam significat nomen, est conceptio intellectus de re significata per nomen” (Summa theol. 1.13.4; compare 1.5.2).
25 Cf. Paulus Soncinas, Quaestiones Metaphysicales Acutissimae (Venice, 1588; rpt. Frankfurt: Minerva GmbH, 1967), p. 2b: “Conceptus formalis est secundum aliquos actus intelligendi, et secundum S. Thomam est ver<b>um formatum de re, per actum intelligendi.”
26 For further discussion, see Nuchelmans, Gabriel, Judgment and Proposition from Descartes to Kant (Amsterdam, Oxford and New York: North-Holland, 1983), p. 9–26.Google Scholar
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28 Hervaeus Natalis, Quolibeta, f. 43 rb.
29 Dominic of Flanders, Quaestiones super XII Libros Methaphysicorum (Venice, 1499; rpt. Frankfurt: Minerva GmbH, 1967), sig. i 7 rb; see also sig. i 5 rb. For discussion of analogy in Thomas of Sutton's Quaestiones disputatae, see Przezdziecki, Joseph J., “Thomas of Sutton's Critique on the Doctrine of Univocity,” in An Étienne Gilson Tribute, edited by O’Neil, C. J. (Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 1959), p. 189–208.Google Scholar
30 Hervaeus Natalis, Quolibeta, f. 43 rb.
31 See Dominic of Flanders, Quaestiones super XII Libros, sig. i 2 va: “aliquid dicitur commune dupliciter, uno modo communitate abstractionis, alio modo communitate proportionis.”
32 Aureol, Peter, Scriptum Super Primum Sententiarum, 2 vols., edited by Buytaert, Eligius M. (St. Bonaventure, NY: Franciscan Institute; Louvain, Belgium: E. Nauwelaerts; Paderbom, Germany: F. Schöningh, 1956), p. 483.Google Scholar
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34 See especially Marion, Jean-Luc, Sur la théologie blanche de Descartes (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1981), p. 80–82 and passim.Google Scholar
35 Thomas Aquinas, In I Sent, d.19 q.5 a.2 ad 1.
36 Auctores, Incerti, Quaestiones super Sophisticos Elenchos, edited by Ebbesen, S., Corpus Philosophorum Danicorum Medii Aevi, No. VII (Copenhagen: Gad, 1977), p. 129–34, 310–17Google Scholar. Cf. Simon of Faversham, Quaestiones super libro Elenchorum, edited by Ebbesen, S., Izbicki, T., Longeway, J., del Punta, F., Serene, E. and Stump, E. (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 1984), p. 78, 123f.Google Scholar
37 John Duns Scotus, In librum Praedicamentorum quaestiones, in Opera omnia 1 (Paris: Vivès, 1891), p. 446a–447a; In libros Elenchorum quaestiones, in Opera omnia 2 (Paris: Vivès, 1891), p. 20a–25a.
38 Burley, In Praed., sig. c 5ra-rb.
39 Alyngton, Robert, Predicamenta, Oxford, Bodleian Library: MS Rawl. C 677, f. 25 ra.Google Scholar
40 Robert Alyngton, Predicamenta, f. 24 va-vb: “dicitur equivocum analogum cuius primarium significatum est analogum et hoc contingit quando idem significatum participatur a pluribus sed prius et posterius quo ad ordinem intelligendi vel secundum magis et minus modo quo ens participatur a substantia et accidente.”
41 Capreolus, Defensiones theologiae, p. 135a, p. 142a–b. In the latter part of the sixteenth century, Petrus Fonseca shows that he had the same difficulty as I do in following Capreolus, for he reports the one-ratio view, and then remarks that Capreolus seems to hold it. See Petrus Fonseca, Commentariorvm In Metaphysicorvm Aristotelis Stagiritae Libros Tomvs I–II [one volume] (Cologne, 1615; rpt. Hildesheim: Georg Olms, 1964), cols. 712–13.
42 Capreolus, Defensiones theologiae, p. 142a. The passage is quoted in full, p. 122b–123a.
43 Versor, Johannes, Quaestiones super metaphysicam Arisiotelis (Cologne, 1494; rpt. Frankfurt/Main: Minerva GmbH, 1967), f. xxv vb.Google Scholar
44 Dominic of Flanders, Quaestiones super XII Libros, sig. i 5 ra.
45 Henry of Ghent, Summa Quaestionum, vol. 1, f. cxxiiii r-v.
46 Ibid., vol. 1, f. cxxiiii v-f. cxxv r.
47 John of Jandun, Quaestiones in duodecim libros metaphysicae (Venice, 1553; rpt. Frankfurt/Main: Minerva GmbH, 1966), f. 45ra.
48 Ibid., f. 45rb-va. John of Jandun writes (f. 45va): “Illud quod significat diversa secundum diversas rationes ordinatas, hoc est analogum, ita quod quedam eorum attribuantur uni, sed ens est huiusmodi, quia significat 10 predicamenta secundum diversas rationes ordhiatas secundum prius et posterius.…”
49 Ibid., f. 46rb. He writes “… unde non concipitur uno conceptu simplici et indivisibili ens, sed pluribus conceptibus vel uno conceptu composito, et secundum analogiam ad unum, ut dictum est prius.”
50 Ibid., f. 46va.
51 Pinborg, Jan, “Anonymi Quaestiones in Tractatus Petri Hispani I–III Traditae in codice Cracoviensi 742 (anno fere 1350),” Cahiers de l'institut du moyen-âge grec et latin, 41 (1982): 9.Google Scholar
52 Ibid., p. 131–32.
53 Johannes Versor, Quaestiones super metaphysicam, f. xxv vb.
54 Dominic of Flanders, Quaestiones super XII Libros, sig. i 7 ra.
55 Hervaeus Natalis, Quolibeta, f. 46 va.
56 Ibid., f. 45 va.
57 Soncinas, Quaestiones Metaphysicales, p. 6a–7b.
58 Aureol, Scriptum, p. 471–523.
59 Ibid., p. 509.
60 Ibid., p. 485: “conceptus ille est simpliciter denudatus in actu ab omni ratione, una vel pluribus, propria vel communi, tantummodo unus existens unitate confusionis et omnimodae indeterminationis”; ibid., p. 505: “conceptus entis est simpliciter denudatus ab omni ratione actuali, una vel pluribus, propria vel communi, et idcirco est tantum unus unitate confusionis, implicite omnem rem et omnem rationem continens, explicite vero nullam.”
61 Ibid., p. 520.
62 I have adopted the translation “undiscriminating” for confusus from Alfred Freddoso. See William of Ockham: Quodlibetal Questions, 2 vols., translated by Freddoso, Alfred J. and Kelley, Francis E. (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1991), Vol. 1, p. 169, n. 2.Google Scholar
63 Soncinas, Quaestiones Metaphysicales, p. 2a.
64 Capreolus, Defensiones theologiae, p. 125b–126b, is drawn from Aureol, Scriptum, p. 491–505, and Capreolus, Defensiones theologiae, p. 126b–127b, is drawn from Aureol, Scriptum, p. 477–80.
65 See, e.g., Fonseca, Commentariorum In Metaphysicorum, col. 689.
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