Biomedical Engineering Reference
In-Depth Information
55. Wolter, “Native Freedom of the Will,” 151.
56. Ibid., 152.
57. John Duns Scotus, Reportatio Parisiensis 11.6.2.9, in Wolter, “Native
Freedom of the Will,” 152.
58. John Boler, “The Moral Psychology of Duns Scotus: Some Preliminary
Questions,” Franciscan Studies 28 (1990): 4.
59. Wolter, “Native Freedom of the Will,” 152.
60. John Duns Scotus, cited in Felix Aluntis and Allan B. Wolter, trans., John
Duns Scotus: God and Creatures (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1975), 378.
61. William Frank, “Duns Scotus' Concept of Willing Freely: What Divine
Freedom beyond Choice Teaches Us,” Franciscan Studies 42 (1982): 87.
62. Ibid., 98.
63. Ibid., 83.
64. Ibid., 87.
65. Ibid., 85.
66. William Frank, “Duns Scotus' Quodlibetal Teaching on the Will” (PhD diss.,
Catholic University of America, 1982), 77.
67. Wolter, “Native Freedom of the Will,” 152, 154.
68. Valerius Messerich, “The Awareness of Causal Initiative and Existential
Responsibility in the Thought of Duns Scotus,” in De Doctrina Ionnis Scoti
(Rome: Acta Congressus Scotistici Internationalis, 1968), 2:630-631.
69. Ibid., 631.
70. Wolter, “Native Freedom of the Will,” 153.
71. Wilson, On Human Nature , 221, 201.
72. Ibid., 201.
73. Ibid., 216, 195.
74. Wolter, “Native Freedom of the Will,” 98, 105.
75. Ibid., 105.
76. Karl Rahner, “Christology within an Evolutionary View,” in Theological
Investigations , trans. Karl-H. Kruger (New York: Crossroad, 1983), 160,
164.
77. Ibid., 164, 165.
78. Ibid., 167.
79. Ibid., 168, 171.
80. Lindon Eaves and Lora Gross, “Exploring the Concept of Spirit as a
Model for the God-World Relation in the Age of Genetics,” Zygon 27 (1992):
226.
81. Ibid., 274, 278.
Search WWH ::




Custom Search