Saint Bonaventure and Angelic Natural Knowledge of Singulars

American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 85 (1):143-159 (2011)
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Abstract

In this article, I argue that St. Bonaventure’s account of angelic natural knowledge of singulars is a remote source for the doctrine of intuitive cognition as this doctrine is later articulated in the writings of John Duns Scotus and his contemporaries. The article begins by reminding the reader of the essential elementsof intuitive cognition, then surveys the treatment of angelic knowledge in Bonaventure’s predecessors and contemporaries, and ends with an analysis ofBonaventure’s own teaching. The point on which Bonaventure anticipates Scotus’s teaching is his insistence that angels know truths about singulars by directlycognizing the existence and presence of singulars without receiving any species in the direct cognitive act.

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Timothy Brian Noone
Catholic University of America

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Saint Bonaventure.Tim Noone - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

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