The next meeting will take place on Friday 19 June 2015 at The Warburg Institute, London.
11:00-12:00
John Marenbon (Cambridge University)
Why the Long Middle Ages are important for a Real History of Philosophy
12:00-13:00
George Corbett (Cambridge University)
Peraldus, Aquinas and the Tradition of the Seven Capital Vices
13:00-14:00
Lunch break
14:00-15:00
Irena Cronin (University of California, Los Angeles)
Concerning Infinitizing Negation and Existence: A Solution to a Vague Case
15:00-16:00
Caterina Tarlazzi (Cambridge University)
Is Socrates a Universal? Audacious Views in Early Twelfth-Century Realism
16:00-16:30
Coffee break
16:30-17:30
Luca Gili (University of Leuven)
Aristotelian Plenitude: Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas on the Principle of Plenitude
11:00-12:00
John Marenbon (Cambridge University)
Why the Long Middle Ages are important for a Real History of Philosophy
12:00-13:00
George Corbett (Cambridge University)
Peraldus, Aquinas and the Tradition of the Seven Capital Vices
13:00-14:00
Lunch break
14:00-15:00
Irena Cronin (University of California, Los Angeles)
Concerning Infinitizing Negation and Existence: A Solution to a Vague Case
15:00-16:00
Caterina Tarlazzi (Cambridge University)
Is Socrates a Universal? Audacious Views in Early Twelfth-Century Realism
16:00-16:30
Coffee break
16:30-17:30
Luca Gili (University of Leuven)
Aristotelian Plenitude: Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas on the Principle of Plenitude
Abstracts

medieval_philosophy_network_march_2015_abstracts.pdf |