the origin of diversity in Albert the Great's On the causes and the procession of the universe /
Thérèse Bonin.
Notre Dame, Ind.:
University of Notre Dame Press,
c2001.
viii, 179 p. ;
24 cm.
Publications in medieval studies ;
29
Reworking of the author's dissertation (doctoral)--University of Notre Dame.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-168) and indexes.
1. Introduction. 1.1. Responses to Emanation. 1.2. Albert on the Nature of the Liber de causis. 1.3. The Nature of Albert's Paraphrase of the Liber de causis. 1.4. Summary of the Liber de causis. 1.5. A Doctrinal Problem -- 2. Emanation and Causation -- 3. God's Incommunicability to Creatures. 3.1. An Apparent Contradiction. 3.2. Esse and Id Quod Est. 3.3. The Interpretation of Liber de causis 19. 3.4. Resolving the Contradiction -- 4. The First Created Thing. 4.1. Ab Uno Non Nisi Unum. 4.2. Prima Rerum Creatarum Est Esse; Esse Creatum Primum Est Intelligentia -- 5. Mediation in the Procession of Creatures -- 6. God's Immediacy to the Procession of Creatures.
0
Creation as emanation.
Albertus,1193?-1280., De causis et processu universitatis a prima causa.