Copyright

Iacopo Costa; John Longeway; Matthew Wennemann;

Published On

2025-09-18

Page Range

pp. 2–191

Language

  • English
  • Latin

Print Length

190 pages

Book 1

Contributors

Iacopo Costa

(author)
Directeur de recherche PSL at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Iacopo Costa is « directeur de recherche » at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS). He specializes in the history of philosophy and theology in the late Middle Ages, and works also as a text editor. Among his most important publications is the critical edition of Radulphus Brito's commentary on Nicomachean Ethics (in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis, 2022).

Gustavo Fernández Walker

(author)
Assistant researcher at the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science at University of Gothenburg

Gustavo Fernandez Walker is assistant researcher at the University of Gothenburg. He got his Phd in Philosophy at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and a PhD in Philology and Hermeneutics at the Università del Salento, Italy. He has held postdoctoral fellowships in Buenos Aires, Dresden and Gothenburg.

Ana María Mora-Márquez

(author)
Senior Lecturer in Theoretical Philosophy at Lund University
External Researcher Affiliated to the CNRS research center SPHERE at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Ana María Mora-Márquez is senior lecturer in Theoretical Philosophy at Lund University and the PI of a research projects on the medieval reception of Aristotles’ philosophy of science. She has written extensively on medieval Aristotelian logic and epistemology, edited medieval logical texts, and published the book "The Thirteenth-Century Notion of Signification” (Brill 2015).

John Longeway

(translator)

John Longeway is professor of medieval philosophy at University of Wisconsin, now in retirement. He has published extensively on medieval and renaissance epistemology and philosophy of science, and on Aristotle’s Posterior Analytics and its medieval reception.

Matthew Wennemann

(translator)
PhD Candidate in the Philosophy Department at University of Colorado Boulder

Matthew Wennemann is a PhD Candidate in the Philosophy Department at the University of Colorado Boulder. He is specializing in medieval philosophy, especially the thought of John Duns Scotus