Theology as a science and Duns Scotus's distinction between intuitive and abstractive cognition

Speculum 64 (3):579-599 (1989)
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Abstract

By all accounts one of the most influential philosophical contributions of Duns Scotus is his distinction between intuitive cognition, in which a thing is known as present and existing, and abstractive cognition, which abstracts from actual presence and existence. Recent scholarship has focused almost exclusively on the role given intuitive cognition in the justification of contingent propositions and on the debates over certitude which arose from the critiques of Scotus's distinction by Peter Aureoli and William of Ockham

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Stephen Dumont
University of Notre Dame

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