11 found
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  1.  21
    Campanella as Forerunner of Descartes.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1956 - Franciscan Studies 16 (1-2):37-59.
  2.  33
    Knowledge of the Extramental World in the System of Tommaso Campanella.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1957 - Franciscan Studies 17 (2-3):188-212.
  3.  6
    Man and His Approach to God in John Duns Scotus.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1983 - University Press of America.
  4.  32
    Pioneers of the Nineteenth-Century Scholastic Revival in Italy.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1954 - New Scholasticism 28 (1):1-37.
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  5.  19
    The Concept of Being and Non-being in the Philosophy of Totnmaso Campanella.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1957 - New Scholasticism 31 (1):34-67.
  6.  6
    Tommaso Campanella; Renaissance pioneer of modern thought.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1969 - Washington,: Catholic University of America Press.
  7.  24
    The Human Mind and the Knowledge of God: Reflections on a Scholastic Controversy.Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1980 - Franciscan Studies 40 (1):5-17.
  8.  17
    Gisela Bock, "Thomas Campanella: Politisches Interesse und Philosophische Spekulation". [REVIEW]Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1977 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (1):99.
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  9.  14
    La Liberià Personale. [REVIEW]Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1957 - New Scholasticism 31 (2):288-290.
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  10. Maria Cristina Bartolomei, "Tomismo e principio di non contraddizione". [REVIEW]Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1974 - The Thomist 38 (3):676.
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  11.  35
    The City of the Sun. [REVIEW]Bernardino M. Bonansea - 1984 - Review of Metaphysics 37 (4):845-846.
    The City of the Sun is Tommaso Campanella's best known work, even though it represents only a small fraction of the vast literary production of a man who claimed to have been called to reform society, religion, and all the sciences and spent many years of his troubled life in writing on the most disparate subjects. The work, as the subtitle indicates, is a poetical dialogue describing an imaginary and hypothetical state ruled by philosophers who have never come into contact (...)
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