The University of Toronto Colloquium in Mediaeval Philosophy 2015 - Day 2
University of Toronto
Session II (10:00 - 12:00)
Chair: Walid Saleh (University of Toronto)
Speaker: Emma Gannagé (Georgetown University): “Al-Kindî On Why Mathematics Matters”
Commentator Thérèse-Anne Druart (Catholic University of America)
Session III (2:00 - 4:00)
Chair: Celia Byrne (University of Toronto)
Zita Thot (Fordham University): “Was Giles a Thomist about Divine Concurrence?”
René Létourneau (Université du Québec, Montréal): “Substantial Plurality of the Soul: A Mid-XIIIth Century Naturalist Interpretation”
Michael Szlachta (University of Toronto): “Peter John Olivi, Freedom, and the Will’s Dominativus Aspectus”
Session IV (4:15 - 6:15)
Chair: Bernardo Carlos Bazan (University of Ottawa)
Antoine Côté (University of Ottawa): “Pierre Roger (1291-1352) on the Causes and Object of Cognition”
Commentator: Peter John Hartman (Loyola University, Chicago)
Registration and inquiries: medieval_dot_philosophy_at_utoronto_dot_ca
The colloquium is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, the Collaborative Program in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy, the Centre for Medieval Studies, the Department of Near and Middle Eastern Studies, and the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
Organizers: Deborah Black, Peter King, Martin Pickavé