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Is there a metaphysical approach to the transcendentals in Ockham?
the case of the good
pp. 111-124
Abstract
The transcendentals (being, one, good, true, thing, and something) have long been associated with medieval philosophy and metaphysics in particular. Scholarship has accepted that Ockham's treatment of the transcendentals is markedly semantic: the transcendentals are primarily conceived as terms or concepts rather than as features of reality. This chapter argues that despite the legitimacy of characterizing Ockham's doctrine of the transcendentals as semantic, there is (and ought to be) a metaphysical basis to this doctine for at least the case of the good. Being good is an intrinsic and necessary feature of every being. How this metaphysical claim is to be understood is an important addition to Ockham's discussion on the semantic properties of the terms "being" and "good."
Publication details
Published in:
Pelletier Jenny, Roques Magali (2017) The language of thought in late medieval philosophy: essays in honor of Claude Panaccio. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 111-124
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-66634-1_7
Full citation:
Pelletier Jenny (2017) „Is there a metaphysical approach to the transcendentals in Ockham?: the case of the good“, In: J. Pelletier & M. Roques (eds.), The language of thought in late medieval philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, 111–124.