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LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS

Jan A. Aertsen is Director Emeritus of the Thomas-Institute at the University of Cologne. His extensive research and writing on medieval philosophy are focused on and on the doctrine of the transcendentals, most notably in his book Medieval Philosophy and the Transcendentals: The Case of Thomas Aquinas (1996). His current project is a study of the history and philosophical importance of the theory of the transcendentals.

Bernardo Carlos Bazán is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa and a Fellow of The Royal Society of Canada. He is an expert in the field of thirteenth-century philosophical anthro- pology. His many publications include critical editions of works on the soul by , Thomas Aquinas, anonymous Masters of Arts, and he was a co-editor of John , Quaestiones de anima (2006). He has published numerous articles on thirteenth- century psychological doctrines, and his forthcoming book concerns L’âme humaine selon Thomas d’Aquin.

Oliva Blanchette is Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He is a specialist in systematic metaphysics and philosophy of religion. He has recently published Maurice Blondel: A Philosophical Life (2010). He is preparing a forthcoming book titled Theory and Practice of Self- hood: A Philosophy of Human Existence.

Olivier Boulnois is “Professeur habilité à diriger des recherches” and “Directeur d’études à l’École Pratique des Hautes Études” in . A specialist in medieval philosophy and theology, he has recently published Au-delà de l’image: Une archéologie du visuel au Moyen Âge, Ve–XVIe siècle (2008), and Philosophie et théologie au Moyen Âge. Anthologie, tome II (2009). His current work focuses on the his- tory of medieval metaphysics, the history of the medieval theories of freedom. 982 list of contributors

Anthony J. Celano is Professor of Philosophy at Stonehill College. He is a specialist in ancient and medieval moral philosophy, he has recently an article concerning “Phronesis, Prudence and Moral Good- ness in the Thirteenth Century Commentaries on the Nicomachean Ethics” in Mediaevalia Philosophica Polonorum 36 (2007). His current projects focus on the thirteenth-century reception of Aristotle’s Nico- machean Ethics, and on the concepts of phronesis and prudentia in Aristotle and his medieval commentators.

Jean Celeyrette is Professor Emeritus at the University of . He is a specialist in medieval sciences and philosophy, and has recently published with Jean-Luc Solère an “Édition de la question ordinaire n°18 de intensione virtutum de Godefroid de Fontaines” in J. Meirin- hos / O. Weijers (edd.), Florilegium Mediaevale. Études offertes à Jac- queline Hamesse à l’occasion de son éméritat, Louvain-la-Neuve 2009 and “La questio de puncto de Michel de Montecalerio en réponse à Jean Buridan” in Archives d’Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 75 (2008). His current research focuses on the question of intensio in the beginning of fourteenth century.

William J. Courtenay is Charles Homer Haskins Professor Emeri- tus of Medieval History at the University of Wisconsin. He is a spe- cialist in medieval intellectual history and has published many books and countless articles on fourteenth-century philosophy and theology in particular. A collection of some of has articles, titled Ockham and Ockhamism. Studies in the Dissemination and Impact of his Thought was published in 2008. Two volumes of his edition of the Rotuli Parisienses. Supplications to the Pope from the University of Paris have already appeared (2002 and 2004), and he is presently completing a third volume of Rotuli Parisienses and preparing a book on the Uni- versity of Paris in the fourteenth century.

Anne Davenport is Assistant Professor of Humanities in the Honors Program at Boston College. She has published works on medieval theo- ries of the infinite, most recently “Trois aspects de l’infini divin dans la théologie de Pierre Auriol”, in Les études philosophiques 4 (2009). Her current research focuses on the English theologian Franciscus a Sancta Clara, a close associate of the Cartesian author Antoine Legrand.