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         Ockham William Of:     more books (100)
  1. 1285 Births: William of Ockham, Emperor Go-Nijo, Ferdinand Iv of Castile, Patrick V, Earl of March, Stephen Uros Iii Decanski of Serbia
  2. 1347 Deaths; William of Ockham, Louis Iv, Holy Roman Emperor, Kokan Shiren, Mokhadaji Gohil, Maria of Navarre, John of Viktring
  3. William of Ockham and the Divine Freedom.: An article from: The Review of Metaphysics by Timothy B. Noone, 1994-09-01
  4. The Philosophy of William of Ockham: in the Light of its Principles. (Book reviews: summaries and comments *). (book review): An article from: The Review of Metaphysics by Timothy Noone, 2001-06-01
  5. SELECTIONS FROM MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHERS VOL. II: Roger Bacon to William of Ockham by Roger Bacon, Saint Bonaventura, et all 1958
  6. The Psychology of Habit According to William Ockham (Philosophy Series) by Fuchs Oswald, 1952-06
  7. World Philosophers and Their Works: Ockham, William of -- Xhuangzi Indexes --2000 publication. by various, 2000-01-01
  8. Nature, Structure, and Function of the Church in William of Ockham
  9. Eucharistic Teaching of William Ockham:A Dissertation
  10. Selections From Medieval Philosophers Volume I Augustine to Albert the Great.; Volume II Roger Bacon to William of Ockham by Richard, (Ed. ) McKeon, 1962-01-01
  11. Lexique Philosophique de Guillaume D'Ockham: Étude des Notions Fundamentales [Philosophical Lexicon of William of Ockham] (Publications de la Recherche Scientifique) by Leon (Léon) / William of Ockham Baudry, 1958
  12. The Age of Belief The Medieval Philosophers St. Augustine, Boethius, Abelard, St. Bernard, St. Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, William of Ockham and Others The Mentor Philosophers by Selector of Works and Writer of Introduction and Commentary Anne Fremantle, 1955
  13. Divine Command Theory: William of Ockham, Ten Commandments, Thomas Aquinas, You Shall Not Murder, I Am the Lord Your God, You Shall Not Covet
  14. 14th-Century Latin Writers: Dante Alighieri, John Wycliffe, William of Ockham, Petrarch, Thomas Bradwardine, Baldus de Ubaldis, Duns Scotus

81. On The Power Of Emperors And Popes Of Ockham William Western Philosophy C 500 To
On the Power of Emperors and Popes Of ockham william Western philosophy c 500 toc 1600 Political science theory Political Science. Author Of ockham william.
http://www.poemmarket.co.uk/Of-Ockham-William-On-the-Power-of-Emperors-185506552
Title: On the Power of Emperors and Popes
Author: Of Ockham William
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich H Hege...
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich H Lect...

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich H Lect...

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich H Phil...
...
Rostock gestern. Kal-38901306...

82. Ockham, Ocham, Occam, Or Ocham?
Occam is the Latinized spelling of ockham My Webster's shows the razor man to be ockham, william of or Occam, william of, see ockham neither of which is
http://xtronics.com/reference/ockham.htm
Boolean: AND OR Case Insensitive Sensitive
Ockham, Ocham, Occam, or Ocham?
Spelling Trivia
William Ocham of Ockham’s razor
Ocham’s name is misspelled quite often in literature. My best information shows that the original and correct spelling is Ockham. Some of the misspelling’s I've seen are Ocham and Occham.
William came from Ockham which is near Guildford, S.W. of London, just off junction 10 of the M25 with the A3. Medieval spelling was "rubbery" and while the village is now named `Ockham', the spelling `Occam' is frequently used in connection with William. Occam is the Latinized spelling of Ockham
My Webster's shows the razor man to be "Ockham, William of" or "Occam, William
of, see Ockham" neither of which is "Ocham".
Newton had his own version: "Do not needlessly multiply causes." Special thanks to Don Lancaster for his help in solving this riddle.
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83. William Ockham Escapes Avignon
May 26, 1328 • william of ockham flees from Avignon. FEATURED VIDEO Quest forthe True Cross. John XXII (left) and william of ockham did not see eye to eye.
http://www.gospelcom.net/chi/DAILYF/2002/05/daily-05-26-2002.shtml
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John XXII (left) and William of Ockham did not see eye to eye.

84. InteLex Past Masters - William Of Ockham: Work Of Ninety Days
william of ockham The Work of Ninety Days, translated by John Kilcullen and JohnScott. “An easyto-learn and -use but extremely powerful scholarly tool.
http://www.nlx.com/titles/titlownd.htm
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TESTIMONIALS $XCHANGE FEEDBACK ... find related titles
William of Ockham: The Work of Ninety Days, translated by John Kilcullen and John Scott
Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie Database Language : English Contents: Ockham's Work of Ninety Days , his first major work in a twenty-year campaign against Pope John XXII, is a thorough discussion of the place of voluntary poverty in religious life. It includes a discussion of the place of property in civil life and its relation to natural rights and human law. First time translated into English and available only in electronic form.
CD-ROM purchasers will receive an HTML version of the database, with side-by-side windows to facilitate close reading of the text. Appended to the text are two essays by John Kilcullen, "Natural Law and Will," and "The Origin of Property: Ockham, Grotius, Pufendorf, and some others." The database also contains a lengthy introduction by Prof. Kilcullen to the Ockham text.
License Pricing
Ockham CD-ROM Web Server SGML ... Individual n/a n/a n/a Institutional n/a n/a n/a Campus-wide call n/a ISBN# Windows Macintosh
Notes:
  • Prices do not include the shipping and handling charge, the setup fee for
  • 85. OCKHAM, Wilhelm Von
    william Martha Kneale, The Development of Logic Löwen/Paris1962/63; - Elilius M. Buytaert, The Tractatus logicae minor of ockham.
    http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/o/ockham_w.shtml
    Verlag Traugott Bautz www.bautz.de/bbkl Bestellmöglichkeiten des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Zur Hauptseite des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Abkürzungsverzeichnis des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Bibliographische Angaben für das Zitieren ... NEU: Unser E-News Service
    Wir informieren Sie regelmäßig über Neuigkeiten und Änderungen per E-Mail. Helfen Sie uns, das BBKL aktuell zu halten! Band VI (1993) Spalten 1090-1093 Autor: Franz Danksagmüller Werke: Lit.: Franz Danksagmüller

    86. Cutt And Plumbridge
    CUTT 2 Charles CUTT 11months 1851 Census HO107/1594 ockham Common william CUTTS35 Farmer Grocer b ockham Harriett CUTTS 30 b ockham william CUTTS 11 b
    http://www.geocities.com/hornbyfam/CuttPlumbridge.html
    William CUTT married Harriet PLUMBRIDGE
    17 June 1838 in Ockham Surrey
    William was the son of Henry CUTT and Hannah REED
    Harriet was the daughter of James PLUMBRIDGE and Harriet CHENNELL
    Children
    William CUTT
    9 June 1838 Wisley married Margaret BAILEY in 1859 Charles CUTT 28 February 1841 Ockham married Sarah Ann KILMINSTER in 1861 Eliza CUTT 22 January 1843 Ockham married Charles WOODGER Arthur CUTT 5 December 1847 Ockham Henry Albert CUTT 7 September 1851 Ockham Emma Emily CUTT 6 November 1853 Ockham buried 24 June 1855 Harriet CUTT 6 January 1861 Ockham 1841 Census: HO107/1080: Ockham, Surrey William CUTT 25 Ag Lab Harriett CUTT 23 William CUTT 2 Charles CUTT 11months 1851 Census: HO107/1594: Ockham Common Home

    87. William Of Ockham's Logical Transformations
    william of ockham (also known as william of Occam) won fame as a logician around1300 AD. 1285 AD to 1349 AD william of ockham's Logical Transformations.
    http://www.maxmon.com/1285ad.htm
    1285 AD to 1349 AD
    William of Ockham's Logical Transformations
    William of Ockham (also known as William of Occam) was born in 1285 in Surrey, England, and lived until sometime around 1349. Ockham (who entered the Franciscan order and studied and taught at the University of Oxford from 1309 to 1319) was known as Doctor Invincibilis (from the Latin, meaning "unconquerable doctor") and Venerabilis Inceptor (meaning "worthy initiator"). a Ockham was a philosopher and Scholastic theologian, and also won fame as a logician. During the course of his logical investigations, Ockham discovered the foundations for what were to become known as DeMorgan Transformations , which were described by Augustus DeMorgan some 500 years later. To celebrate Ockham's position in history, the OCCAM computer programming language was named in his honor. (OCCAM is the native programming language for the British-developed INMOS transputer.) a These notes are abstracted from the book Bebop BYTES Back
    (An Unconventional Guide to Computers)

    88. The Influence Of William Of Ockham & Nominalism On Martin Luther & Early Protest
    Marilyn Adams's massive work william ockham is the best comprehensive study ofockham's thought ever written in English or, as far as I know, in any other
    http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ229.HTM
    The Influence of William of Ockham and Nominalism on Martin Luther and Early Protestant Thought Compiled and Edited by
    Dave Armstrong [ (P) = Protestant / (C) = Catholic / (O) = Orthodox / (U) = unknown religious persuasion / secular ]
    This paper consists entirely of citations. Sources of citations will be in blue TABLE OF CONTENTS (Hyper-Linked) I. Introductions to Medieval Philosophical Nominalism II. Introductions to William of Ockham's Philosophical Theology III. Ockham and Nominalism Compared to the Scholastic Systems of St. Thomas Aquinas and Duns Scotus IV. Ockham and Nominalism on Faith and Reason ... VIII. Ockham and Nominalism and Later Humanist, Secularist, and Postmodernist Philosophies I. Introductions to Medieval Philosophical Nominalism From: Catholic Encyclopedia (C) (1911), "Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism," written by Maurice de Wulf, greatly abridged here.
    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11090c.htm These terms are used to designate the theories that have been proposed as
    solutions of one of the most important questions in philosophy, often referred to
    as the problem of universals, which, while it was a favourite subject for

    89. PRICEFARMER.COM: Farm-Fresh Price Comparisons Of Books
    Human, but Especially over the Empire and Those Subject to the Empire, Usurpe (Paperback)by william; Arthur Stephen McGrade; of ockham william October 1992
    http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?author=William

    90. William Of Ockham Philosophy Forum Frigate
    william of ockham Forum Frigate PHILOSOPHY FLEET If ye would like to moderate thewilliam of ockham Forum Frigate, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
    http://killdevilhill.com/z/yphilo1d/WilliamofOckhamhall/shakespeare1.html
    William of Ockham
    Forum Frigate
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    If ye would like to moderate the William of Ockham Forum Frigate, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
    PHILOSOPHY, William of Ockham, Philosopher, and Aristotle all sail aboard The Jolly Roger
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    91. William Of Ockham - Quotes And Quotations
    W X Y Z, Author william of ockham, Plurality should not be Get Our eBook, Fun and Games, Subscribe. The Best Quotation eBook
    http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/w/a132683.html
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    92. William Of Occam
    william of Occam. (or ockham), 12851349?), known as Doctor Invincibilis (Latin,“unconquerable doctor”) and Venerabilis Inceptor (Latin, “worthy initiator
    http://paedpsych.jk.uni-linz.ac.at/INTERNET/ARBEITSBLAETTERORD/PHILOSOPHIEORD/Oc
    William of Occam
    Ockham was born in Surrey, England. He entered the Franciscan order and studied and taught at the University of Oxford from 1309 to 1319. Denounced by Pope John XXII for dangerous teachings, he was held in house detention for four years (1324-28) at the papal palace in Avignon, France, while the orthodoxy of his writings was examined. Siding with the Franciscan general against the pope in a dispute over Franciscan poverty, Ockham fled to Munich in 1328 to seek the protection of Louis IV, Holy Roman emperor, who had rejected papal authority over political matters. Excommunicated by the pope, Ockham wrote against the papacy and defended the emperor until the latter's death in 1347. The philosopher died in Munich, apparently of the plague, while seeking reconciliation with Pope Clement VI. Ockham won fame as a rigorous logician who used logic to show that many beliefs of Christian philosophers (for example, that God is one, omnipotent, creator of all things; and that the human soul is immortal) could not be proved by philosophical or natural reason but only by divine revelation. His name is applied to the principle of economy in formal logic, known as Ockham's razor , which states that entities are not to be multiplied without necessity.

    93. Occam's Razor
    or plurality should not be posited without necessity. The words are those ofthe medieval English philosopher and Franciscan monk william of ockham (ca.
    http://skepdic.com/occam.html
    Robert Todd Carroll
    SkepDic.com
    Occam's razor
    " Pluralitas non est ponenda sine neccesitate " or "plurality should not be posited without necessity." The words are those of the medieval English philosopher and Franciscan monk William of Ockham (ca. 1285-1349). Like many Franciscans, William was a minimalist in this life, idealizing a life of poverty, and like St. Francis himself, battling with the Pope over the issue. William was excommunicated by Pope John XXII. He responded by writing a treatise demonstrating that Pope John was a heretic. What is known as Occam's razor was a common principle in medieval philosophy and was not originated by William, but because of his frequent usage of the principle, his name has become indelibly attached to it. It is unlikely that William would appreciate what some of us have done in his name. For example, atheists often apply Occam's razor in arguing against the existence of God on the grounds that God is an unnecessary hypothesis. We can explain everything without assuming the extra metaphysical baggage of a Divine Being. William's use of the principle of unnecessary plurality occurs in debates over the medieval equivalent of psi.

    94. Ockham, Scotus, Buridan
    Corrected Latin text for the passages from ockham's Dialogus translated in Williamof ockham, A Letter to the Friars Minor and other Writings, ed. Arthur
    http://www.humanities.mq.edu.au/Ockham/0pgeock.html
    Macquarie University
    Late medieval and early modern intellectual history
    Scotus, Ockham, Wyclif, Buridan, Grotius, Bayle R.J. Kilcullen. It may be convenient to copy these files and browse them as 'local files'. Download ock.zip . To unzip this file Macintosh users may need to download Unzip201.hqx and (to unpack that) StuffIt Expander. These can be obtained here zip file updated: September 1999 The linked files are:
  • Corrected Latin text for the passages from Ockham's Dialogus translated in William of Ockham, A Letter to the Friars Minor and other Writings , ed. Arthur Stephen McGrade and John Kilcullen (Cambridge University Press, 1995). The passages are: (An electronic edition on World Wide Web of William of Ockham, Dialogus , Latin text with translation, is being made by John Kilcullen and John Scott for the Medieval Text Committee of the British Academy.)
  • Corrections to the translation published in A Letter
    (Please send other corrections to: john.kilcullen@mq.edu.au)
  • 95. William Of Occam

    http://www.hensa.ac.uk/parallel/www/occam/occam-bio.html
    Biography
    William of Ockham, born in the village of Ockham in Surrey (England) about 1285, was the most influential philosopher of the 14th century and a controversial theologian. He entered the Franciscan order at an early age and took the traditional course of theological studies at Oxford. Strong opposition to his opinions from members of the theological faculty prevented him from obtaining his Master's degree. His teaching had also aroused the attention of Pope John XXII, who summoned him to the papal court in Avignion (France) in 1324. The charges against him were presented by Jogh Lutterell, the former chancellor of the university of Oxford. Ockham was never condemned, but in 1327, while residing in Avignion, he became involved in the dispute over apostolic poverty. When this controversy reached a critical stage in 1328, and the Pope was about to issue a condemnation of the position held by the Franciscans, Ockham and two other Franciscans fled from Avignion to seek the protection of Emperor Louis IV, the Bavarian. They followed the emperor to Munich (Germany) in 1330, where Ockham wrote fervently against the papacy in a series of treatises on papal power and civil sovereignty. The medieval rule of parsimony, or principle of economy, frequently used by Ockham came to be known as

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