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  1. XML. The Challenge of Pletho and the Development of Scholarios’s Theology of Providence, 1432–58. Download. XML. Scholarios’s Study of Aquinas’s Metaphysics. Download. XML. Historical and Theological Analysis of First Tract on Providence. Download.

  2. 1. Jan. 2020 · George Scholarios (Gennadios II) was the first patriarch of Constantinople (1454–1456) after the capture of Constantinople by the Turks. His principal interests were theological; still, he proved one of the most versatile and prolific Byzantine authors and the most fervent Byzantine Thomist and Aristotelian.

  3. This paper argues that compromising the law of non-contradiction weakens RO’s critique of secularism and opens up the possibility of nihilism. Download Free PDF. View PDF. Chase Montague University of Birmingham In A Greek Thomist: Providence in Gennadios Scholarios, Matthew Briel seeks to demonstrate that Gennadios Scholarios, more than ...

  4. Gennadius. Gennadius bzw. in seiner griechischen Form Gennadios ist der Name folgender Personen: Gennadios Scholarios (Gennadios II. Scholarios), Patriarch von Konstantinopel 1453–1463 mit zwei Unterbrechungen. Gennadius von Marseille (auch Gennadius Scholasticus oder Gennadius von Massilia), Geschichtsschreiber des 5. Jahrhunderts. Gennadios II.

  5. 20. Aug. 2019 · Abstract. Georgios, Gennadios II (Scholarios), was the first Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople (1454–1456) after the capture of Constantinople (1453) by the Ottomans, an anti-unionist, an Aristotelian, and surprisingly a Thomist. He was committed to theology, but he also studied, taught, commented on, and engaged in philosophical arguments.

  6. The Scotist Background to Hervaeus Natalis and George-Gennadios Scholarios It has been recently shown that the background to Hervaeus’s Treatise on Second Intentions is heavily under the influence of Scotus’s theories on the same.51 With this in mind, we can see that the silence of Aquinas, not to mention the dearth of logical commentaries ...

  7. One such polymath was George-Gennadios Scholarios. Trained in the Byzantine scholiast tradition, Scholarios learned Latin and, as an autodidact, subsequently mastered Dominican, Scotist, and modista logical and metaphysical literature. Scholarios’s eclecticism in philosophy was later pressed into the service of religion when he became an ...