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Edition Information
Ordinatio. Prologue.
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 1 and 2.
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinction 3.
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 4 to 10.
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 11 to 25.
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frontmatter
translator's preface
titlepage
contents
book one. distinctions 11 - 25
eleventh distinction
question 1. whether the holy spirit proceeds from the father and the son
I. to the question
II. to the principal arguments
question 2. whether, if the holy spirit does not proceed from the son, a real distinction between him and the son could stand.
I. on the question itself
II. response to the question
a. opinion of others
b. against the opinion
III. to the principal arguments
IV. to the reasons for the opinion of others on the question
twelfth distinction
question one. whether the father and the son inspirit the holy spirit insofar as they are altogether one or insofar as they are distinct
I. response to the question
II. whether the father and the son inspirit more by the will insofar as it is one or insofar as it is concordant.
a. opinion of henry of ghent
b. against the opinion of henry
C. scotus’ own opinion
III. whether the father and the son are one inspiriter or two inspiriters
IV. to the principal arguments
question two. whether the father and the son uniformly inspirit the holy spirit
I. to the question
II. to the principal arguments
thirteenth distinction single question
I. the opinions of others
a. first opinion
b. second opinion
C. third opinion
D. fourth opinion
e. fifth opinion
f. sixth opinion
1. exposition of the opinion
2. rejection of the opinion
g. seventh opinion
II. scotus’ own opinion
III. to the principal arguments
fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth distinctions
single question.
I. opinion of peter lombard
II. to the question
III. to the reasons of peter lombard
IV. how the opinion of lombard might be held
V. to the arguments against the opinion of lombard
VI. to the principal arguments
seventeenth distinction. first part. on the habit of charity
question one. whether it is necessary to posit a created charity that formally inheres in a nature capable of beatification
question two. whether it is necessary to posit in a habit the idea of active principle with respect to act
I. to the second question
a. five ways of giving a solution are expounded and examined
1. first way
2. second way
3. third way
4. fourth way
5. what one should think about the four ways
6. fifth way
b. solution of the question by maintaining the third way
C. to the arguments when maintaining the third way
D. to the principal positive arguments while maintaining the fourth way
e. to the arguments for the fifth way
II. to the first question
a. the opinion which is attributed to peter lombard
1. arguments for the opinion attributed to peter lombard
2. arguments against the opinion attributed to peter lombard
b. scotus’ own response
1. whether some supernatural habit needs to be posited that gives grace to a nature capable of being beatified
2. whether a supernatural habit giving it grace has to be posited so that a nature capable of beatification may be beatified
3. about the opinion of peter lombard
C. to the principal arguments
D. to the arguments for the opinion attributed to peter lombard.
appendix a
seventeenth distinction. second part. on the manner of increase in charity
question one. whether the whole of pre-existing charity is corrupted so that no reality the same in number remains in a greater and a lesser charity
I. opinion of godfrey of fontaines
a. exposition of the opinion
b. rejection of the opinion
II. to the question
III. to the arguments
question two. whether that which is positive in the preexisting charity, and which remains when there is increase of charity, is the whole essence of the intensified charity
I. opinion of others
II. scotus’ own response to the question
III. to the principal arguments
[eighteenth distinction. about gift and holy spirit as gift lacking in the ordinatio ]
nineteenth distinction
question one. whether the divine persons are equal in magnitude
I. to the question
a. about equality taken properly
b. on equality taken generally
C. how there is equality in the proposed case
D. about equality in the divine persons
II. to the principal arguments
question two. whether each person is in the other person
I. to the question
a. about the mode in which a person is in a person
1. the opinion of henry of ghent
2. scotus’ own opinion
3. to the arguments for the opinion of henry
b. what the idea is of the being in of the divine persons
C. there is no like example in creatures for the being in of the divine persons
II. to the principal arguments
twentieth distinction
single question. whether the three persons are equal in power
I. to the question
a. determination of the question
b. opinion of others
C. scotus’ own opinion
II. to the principal arguments
twenty first distinction
single question. whether this proposition is true, ‘only the father is god’
I. to the question
II. to the principal arguments
twenty second distinction.
single question. whether god is nameable by us with some name signifying the divine essence in itself, as it is a ‘this’
I. the opinion of others
II. scotus’ own response
appendix a. twenty second distinction
single question.
twenty third distinction
single question. whether person, according as it says something common to the father and the son and the holy spirit, says precisely something of second intention
I. opinion of others
II. scotus’ own response
III. objections against scotus’ own response
twenty fourth distinction
single question. whether number properly exists in divine reality
twenty fifth distinction
single question. whether person in divine reality states substance or relation
I. response to the question
II. the objections of others
endmatter
footnotes
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 26 to 48.
Ordinatio. Book 2. Distinctions 1 - 3.
Ordinatio. Book 2. Distinctions 4 to 44.
Ordinatio. Book 3. Distinctions 1 - 17.
Ordinatio. Book 3. Distinctions 26 - 40.
Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 1 - 7
Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 8 - 13.
Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 14 - 42.
Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 43 - 49.
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Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 11 to 25.
The Ordinatio of John Duns Scotus
Ordinatio. Book 1. Distinctions 11 to 25.
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