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  1.  5
    Avicenna’s Treatment of Analogy/Ambiguity and its Use in Metaphysic.Nathan Poage - 2022 - International Philosophical Quarterly 62 (4):457-476.
    This paper discusses Avicenna’s concept of ambiguity/analogy and argues that while Avicenna doesn’t mention it explicitly there is an analogy of the predication of being between creatures and God, the Necessary of Existence. A consequence of this analogical predication is that for Avicenna, like Aquinas, God does not fall under the subject of metaphysics common being or being qua being. If the predication were univocal as some scholars contend such as Timothy Noone and Olga Lizzini, then God would fall under (...)
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    The Subject and Principles of Metaphysics in Avicenna and Aquinas.Nathan Poage - 2012 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 86:231-243.
    This paper argues that, in spite of interpretations to the contrary, Avicenna and Aquinas are fundamentally agreed as to subject and principles of metaphysics. The first part shows the philosophers’ common metaphysical starting points in the realm of assent and the realm of conceptualization as well as their common use of the distinction between principles common by causality and common by predication to provide the overall structure for their metaphysics . The second part argues that both philosophers have similar descriptions (...)
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  3. The Subject and Principles of Metaphysics in Avicenna and Aquinas.Nathan Poage - 2012 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 86:231-243.
    This paper argues that, in spite of interpretations to the contrary, Avicenna and Aquinas are fundamentally agreed as to subject and principles of metaphysics. The first part shows the philosophers’ common metaphysical starting points in the realm of assent and the realm of conceptualization as well as their common use of the distinction between principles common by causality and common by predication to provide the overall structure for their metaphysics. The second part argues that both philosophers have similar descriptions of (...)
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