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Topic: Robert Kilwardby


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In the News (Sun 20 Dec 09)

  
  Robert Kilwardby
Afterwards joining the order of St Dominic and turning his attention to theology, he was chosen provincial prior of his order in England in 1261, and in October 1272 Pope Gregory X terminated a dispute over the vacant archbishopric of Canterbury by appointing Kilwardby.
Although the new archbishop crowned Edward I and his queen Eleanor in August 1274, he took little part in business of state, but was energetic in discharging the spiritual duties of his office.
Kilwardby was the first member of a mendicant order to attain a high position in the English Church.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/ro/Robert_Kilwardby.html   (240 words)

  
 Thomistic Institute 2000: Snyder
However, Kilwardby's geocentric cosmology meant for him that all of these various human measures of time are translatable into one all-embracing and best known measure of times, the soul's measure of the time of the motion of the sphere of the fixed stars.
Kilwardby's analysis of the unity of time has the merit of anticipating modern recognition of the relativity of human perceptions of time.
Kilwardby's position on tempus illimitatum seems analogous to Averroes' postion that bodies have a quasi-substantial "form of corporeity" ontologically prior to their accidental form of determinate dimensions: see Henry J. Wolfson.
www.nd.edu /Departments/Maritain/ti00/snyder.htm   (4077 words)

  
 John Pecham
When Robert Kilwardby resigned the See of Canterbury, Edward I requested Pecham to take up the cause of Robert Burnell, Bishop of Bath and Wells, and Chancellor of England, but in January, 1279, Pecham himself was elected to that see, and consecrated by Nicholas III.
His suffragans complained that his zeal had led him beyond the limits of his jurisdiction, and deputed St. Thomas of Hereford to carry their joint appeal to Rome, where apparently it was upheld.
At Oxford he renewed the condemnation of certain errors already censured by Robert Kilwardby, many of them containing errors of Averroes, but several of them enunciated by St. Thomas Aquinas, and afterwards commonly accepted in Catholic schools.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/p/pecham,john.html   (555 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Robert Kilwardby
He was a great benefactor of his own order, and bought the site for a Dominican house at Castle Barnard in London.
In 1278 Pope Nicholas III nominated Kilwardby as Cardinal-Bishop of Porto and Santa Rufina, and on 25 July he left England for Italy, taking with him all the registers and archives of Canterbury Cathedral.
This unfortunate loss has never been recovered, and the earliest records of the see are those of his successor Archbishop Peckham, who vainly endeavoured to recover the lost papers.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/08644a.htm   (662 words)

  
 Lecture 6
Some commentators on the Sentences, such as Thomas' later Dominican critic, Robert Kilwardby, made their questions on the fourth book into works devoted exclusively to the theology of religions.
Robert Kilwardby, Quaestiones in librum quartum Sententiarum (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Veroeffentlichungen der Kommission fuer die Herausgabe ungedruckter Texte aus der mittelalterlichen Geisteswelt 17) Muenchen (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften) 1993.
Thomas Aquinas and Robert Kilwardby on the Sacrament of Circumcision, in: Carlos-Josaphat Pinto de Oliveira (Ed.), Ordo sapientiae et amoris.
sap.opwest.org /classroom/sithoah_6.htm   (3305 words)

  
 English Dominican Bookshop: Robert Kilwardby OP   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
English Dominican Bookshop: Robert Kilwardby OP Robert Kilwardby OP fr.
Robert Kilwardby OP was archbishop of Canterbury 1273-1278.
In 1278 he was made a cardinal and moved to Rome, but died a year later.
english.op.org /bookshop/author/24   (46 words)

  
 English Dominican Bookshop: On Time and Imagination   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Robert Kilwardby OP This volume makes available in English an invaluable source for medieval ideas on deep questions that will be familiar to present-day students of philosophy.
The British philosopher-theologian Robert Kilwardby wrote "On Time" and "On Imagination" in Oxford in the 1250s.
In both treatises, Kilwardby struggles to reconcile the views of Aristotle and Augustine.
english.op.org /bookshop/book/104   (121 words)

  
 Walton - Mechancial Arts in the Middle Ages
In Kilwardby's scheme, completed around 1250, we find the trivium and the quadrivium intact from Aristotle, the equation of the seven liberal and seven mechanical arts of Hugh of St. Victor, ethical divisions from Boethius, an echo of Gundissalinus' theoretical topics, and a fully practical Arabic division of mechanics.
Kilwardby is also the first scholastic to deny the difference between theory and practice, seeing them dependent upon each other in such a way that one could not exist without the other.
The mechanical arts in these classifications never did alter the established curricula at the universities, but the legitimacy gained by their inclusion allowed more and more technical matters to be incorporated in formal learning.
www.chass.utoronto.ca /~ihpst/AVISTA/PAPERS/mecharts_walton.html   (3064 words)

  
 Robert Kilwardby O.P.: On Time and Imagination Part 2 (Auctores Britannici Medii Aev, IX) by Robert Kilwardby [ISBN: ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The British philosopher-theologian Robert Kilwardby wrote,`On Time' and `On Imagination' in Oxford in the 1250s.
The first discusses whether time is independent of mind, investigates the nature of the unity of time, and asks whether there is an analogue of time in the life of pure spirits.
The second examines the nature of imagination, and its relations to sensation and desire, and ends with a lengthy section on the roles of head and heart in the exercise of common sense.
www.gettextbooks.com /isbn_0197261213.html   (194 words)

  
 The College of St
The idea of founding a college at Wingham seems to have originated with Robert Kilwardby, Archbishop of Canterbury 1273-1279, who obtained Pope Gregory X's approval to the foundation in 1273.
John Peckham was in Rome to be appointed Archbishop when Kilwardby arrived to be made a cardinal in 1279.
She rode out from there to Wingham, and, whilst the sun was not yet up, was married to her knight in the chapel of one of the canons, Robert atte Brome.
www.wingham.org /History/college_of_stMary.htm   (1379 words)

  
 Amazon.com: "Robert Kilwardby": Key Phrase page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
See all pages with references to Robert Kilwardby.
is only necessary to remark that Alexander of Hales, Adam Marsh, Haymo of Faversham and John Pecham among the Minors, Robert Kilwardby among the Preachers and Simon Stock among the Carmelites exerted an influence and won for themselves a reputation that extended...
of the Summa were not to be provided "except for reasonably intelligent lectors." In Oxford the Dominican archbishop of Canterbury Robert Kilwardby issued his own list on March 18, 1277, unambiguously affecting Thomas, condemning the unicity of form thesis outright.
www.amazon.com /phrase/Robert-Kilwardby   (536 words)

  
 Robert Burnell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Burnell (died October 25, 1292) was an English bishop who served as Lord Chancellor of England in the years 1274-1292.
He was born at Acton Burnell in Shropshire, and probably began his public life as a clerk in the royal chancery.
Robert Burnell · John Peckham Robert Winchelsey · Thomas Cobham · Walter Reynolds · Simon Mepeham · John de Stratford · John de Ufford · Thomas Bradwardine · Simon Islip · William Edington · Simon Langham · William Whittlesey · Simon Sudbury · William Courtenay · Thomas Arundel · Roger Walden · Thomas Arundel · Henry Chichele · John Stafford · John Kemp · Thomas Bourchier · John Morton · Thomas Langton · Henry Deane · William Warham
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Robert_Burnell   (549 words)

  
 ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1... - Online Information article about ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1...
- Online Information article about ROBERT KILWARDBY (d.
Kilwardby was the first member of a mendicant order to attain a high position in the See also:
CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /KHA_KRI/KILWARDBY_ROBERT_d_1279_.html   (355 words)

  
 Dominican Spirituality In England   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
133-136, 271-298), Cardinals Robert Kilwardby (+1279) and William Macclesfield (+1303), Archbishop William of Hotham (+1299), Richard Clapwell or Knapwell (+ ca.
To the same period belongs the life of St. Richard of Chichester (+1253) written by his confessor, Ralph Bocking, a work in which spiritual reflections mingle with the historical narrative (AS, April 3, Antwerp, 1675, pp, 282-318).
The first Dominican Doctor of Oxford, Robert Bacon (+1248), in addition to his now lost theological works, composed the life (BHL, #2404-2411) of his great friend, St. Edmond Rich (+1240), Archbishop of Canterbury (DS, vol.
www.op.org /domcentral/study/ashley/ds08engl.htm   (1485 words)

  
 Department of Philosophy - Anthony Celano
“Robert Kilwardby on the Relation of Virtue to Happiness,” Medieval Philosophy and Theology, 8 (1999), 149-162.
"Robert Kilwardby and the Limits of Moral Science," read at the 24th International Congress of Medieval Studies, University of Western Michigan, May 7, 1989; published in Philosophy and the God of Abraham: Essays in Memory of James A.
"Robert Kilwardby and the Unity of Ethical Science," Conference for Patristic, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Villanova University, Sept. 26, 1992.
faculty.stonehill.edu /acelano   (1614 words)

  
 World history and events in 1274   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
King Robert I the Bruce 1306 to 1329
Birth of Robert I, born in Turnberry Castle, grandson of Robert VII de Bruce
Crowned at Westminster Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Kilwardby
badley.info /history/1274.year.html   (417 words)

  
 Medieval Semiotics (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Ps.- Robert Kilwardby: 1975, The Commentary on “Priscian Maior” ascribed to Robert Kilwardby, ed.K. Fredborg et al., in: Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Age grec et latin 15: 1-146.
The Contribution to the Discussion on Univocal Signification of Beings and Non-Beings Found in a Sophism Attributed to Robert Kilwardby”, in: Medieval Semantics and Metaphysics, ed.
Markus, Robert A.: 1957, “St. Augustine on Signs”, Phronesis 2: 60-83.
plato.stanford.edu /entries/semiotics-medieval   (9567 words)

  
 Robert Kilwardby Books - Signed, used, new, out-of-print
Robert Kilwardby O.P., on Time and Imagination: de Tempore, de Spiritu Fantastico
The second volume in this series devoted to the writings of the English Dominican Robert Kilwardby, this work presents the Latin text of two Oxford treatises from the 1250s--one on time, the other on imagination.
Robert Kilwardby O.P.: On Time and Imagination Part 2
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Robert_Kilwardby   (217 words)

  
 [No title]
After Pecham’s appointment to the primatial see of Canterbury in 1279, he maintained the traditions of his Franciscan heritage, reissuing the condemnations of 1277 to which Robert Kilwardby had subscribed, an echo of the anti-Aristotelian prohibitions at Sens nearly seventy years earlier.
Thus, even after Pecham had left the sphere of intellectual discourse, his presence continued to be felt within the universities, just as it had been in the controversies of the four decades prior to the beginning of his archiepiscopate.
It is inconceivable that Aquinas would have approached the daunting task of writing a summa without thorough comprehension of every orthodox theological work at hand and every treatise on natural philosophy that could be submitted to Christian scrutiny.
www.unc.edu /~nharris/Papers/pecham.doc   (2961 words)

  
 Simon of Faversham (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
It seems strongly influenced by the commentary of Robert Kilwardby (Ms.
A reportatio by Robert of Clothale, which it might be argued could not have been done before 1290.
A literal commentary attributed in the manuscript to “Magister Simonis.” Lohr 1973 thinks it may be by Simon Dacus, but Wolf 1966 argues convincingly that it is Faversham's.
plato.stanford.edu /entries/simon-faversham   (2557 words)

  
 History of Medieval Philosophy 263
He defended most of the characteristic theories of the earlier school and took up an aggressive attitude against Thomism (312).
This is doubtful: Kilwardby was the uncompromising opponent of Thomistic theories.
Here is Kilwardby's scheme of philosophy: I. Philosophia rerum divinarum (naturalis, mathematica, metaphysica).
www2.nd.edu /Departments/Maritain/etext/homp263.htm   (259 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Robert Kilwardby O.P.: On Time and Imagination Part 2 (Auctores Britannici Medii Aev, IX): Books: Robert ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
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Robert Kilwardby O.P.: On Time and Imagination Part 2 (Auctores Britannici Medii Aev, IX) (Hardcover)
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amazon.com /Robert-Kilwardby-O-P-Imagination-Britannici/dp/0197261213   (756 words)

  
 Methodist Apostolicity
Bishop Matthew Simpson was consecrated in 1852 by Bishops William Capers, John Emory, and Joshua Soule.
Bishop Joshua Soule was consecrated in 1824 by Bishops Robert Roberts, Enoch George, and William McKendree.
Bishop William McKendree was consecrated in 1808 by Bishops Richard Whatcoat and Francis Asbury.
www.revneal.org /Writings/apostoli.htm   (2103 words)

  
 Anglican Succession 1
GREGORY XII on the 17th June 1408 consecrated Henry Chicheley as Bishop of St.
David's, who on the 26th October 1427 consecrated Robert Neville as Bishop of Salisbury, who on the 15th May 1435 was one of the consecrators of Thomas Bourchier as Bishop of Worcester (see main list).
We invite your questions and comments, so please do not hesitate to contact us at xofcbooks@yahoo.com.
www.exorthodoxforchrist.com /anglican_succession_1.htm   (329 words)

  
 The ordination of women in the Roman Catholic Church
Thomas Aquinas entered into the horizon of Aristotelian philosophy, and found new meanings in traditional Christian concepts.
Etienne Tempier, the bishop of Paris, and the two successive Archbishops of Canterbury, Robert Kilwardby and John Peckham could never follow him—so they condemned or attacked him.
I doubt any “dialogue” between the theologian and his hierarchical adversaries would have helped; only an intellectual conversion of the bishops could have brought mutual understanding and reconciliation.
www.womenpriests.org /teaching/orsy3_7.asp   (1204 words)

  
 Dominican School of Philosophy & Theology: Spring 2007
Systematic training and practice in basic initiating skills are covered in this second semester of a two-semester sequence.
Continuing "The Medieval Seminar," this course will examine Thomas Aquinas' theology of Judaism in the context both of his own Christian contemporaries (especially Robert Grosseteste, Robert Kilwardby, and John Peckham) and current Roman Catholic thought.
While familiarizing the participants with tools of contemporary medieval research, the seminar will analyze the variety of theological views and their commonalities.
www.dspt.edu /docs/academics/07s_descriptions.asp   (3064 words)

  
 Medieval Semiotics (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Summer 2004 Edition)
“Speech is nothing but a sign” (Sermo totaliter signum est), Robert Kilwardby asserts (Kilwardby De ortu scientiarum, 1976, 160).
From this point onward, however, it gives rise, at first in the framework of grammar theory, to semiotic reflections that go beyond what is known from earlier centuries.
The unknown author, now commonly named Ps.-Robert Kilwardby, opens his commentary on Priscianus maior (written somewhere between 1250 and 1280)
www.science.uva.nl /~seop/archives/sum2004/entries/semiotics-medieval   (9602 words)

  
 Contemporary philosophy, a new survey; similar books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
A dialogue on natural philosophy (William of Conches; translation of the new Latin critical text with a short introduction and explanatory notes by Italo Ronca and Matthew Curr; ISBN: 0268008817; (alk.
De ortu scientiarum (Robert Kilwardby; edited by Albert G. Judy; ISBN: 0888445539; 0% match)
De ortu scientiarum (Robert Kilwardby; edited by Albert G. Judy; ISBN: 0856721263; 0% match)
isbndb.com /d/book/contemporary_philosophy_a02/similar.html   (324 words)

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