Remainders and reminders of the divine. Duns Scotus’s critique of images of God
Other Titles: 
Remainders and reminders of the divine. Duns Scotus’s critique of images of God
Keywords: 
Duns Scotus
intuitive and abstractive cognition
imago Dei
angelic cognition
Duns Scotus
intuitive and abstractive cognition
imago Dei
angelic cognition
Issue Date: 
2016
Publisher: 
Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad de Navarra
ISSN: 
0066-5215
Citation: 
Thomas-LaZella, A. (Andrew). "Remainders and reminders of the divine. Duns Scotus’s critique of images of God". Anuario Filosófico. 49 (3), 2016, 517 - 537
Abstract
In his Quodlibetal Questions and other texts, John Duns Scotus makes the seemingly-startling claim that angels or wayfarers achieve self-knowledge without recognizing God as their exemplar. I will show how this critique of images follows from Scotus’s deeper, more general, rejection of theories of analogy. Despite curtailing the image as a means of understanding God, angels, as well as certain wayfarers, are capable of distinct natural abstractive cognition of God according to Scotus.
In his Quodlibetal Questions and other texts, John Duns Scotus makes the seemingly-startling claim that angels or wayfarers achieve self-knowledge without recognizing God as their exemplar. I will show how this critique of images follows from Scotus’s deeper, more general, rejection of theories of analogy. Despite curtailing the image as a means of understanding God, angels, as well as certain wayfarers, are capable of distinct natural abstractive cognition of God according to Scotus.
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