Philip the Chancellor

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Philip the Chancellor ( lat. Philippus Cancellarius , * after 1160 in Paris ; † December 23, 1236 in Paris) was a poet, chancellor of the chapter of Notre-Dame in Paris and an important scholastic philosopher and theologian who a. a. for the formulation of the transcendental doctrine is known.

Philip the Chancellor has been identified with Philipp von Grève since Josse Bade in 1523 , but with whom he is not identical.

Works

  • Summa quaestionum theologicarum (Summa de bono), ed. N. Wicki, Bern 1985.
  • Distinctiones super Psalterium, ed. Jodocus Badius, Paris 1523 and Brescia 1600
  • Sermones, mostly unprinted
  • Seals, ed. Guido Dreves, AH 50 (1907), 528-535

A later compilation of the Summa de bono is probably the Summa Duacensis, ed. Palémon Glorieux, Textes philos. Du moyen âge 2, Paris 1955.

literature

  • Jan A. Aertsen : Medieval Philosophy as Transcendental Thought. From Philip the Chancellor (c. 1225) to Francisco Suárez . Brill, Leiden 2012. There chapter 3: The Beginning of the Doctrine of the Transcendentals (approx. 1225): Philip the Chancellor , pp. 107-134.
  • Peter Dronke: The Lyrical Compositions of Philip the Chancellor . In: Studi medievali , Vol. 28 (1987), pp. 563-592.
  • Johannes Baptist Schneyer: The moral criticism in the sermons of Philip the Chancellor . Aschendorff, Münster 1963.
  • Niklaus Wicki: The philosophy of Philip the Chancellor. A philosophizing theologian of the early 13th century . Academic Press, Friborg 2005 (= Dokimion, Vol. 29), ISBN 3-7278-1517-5 .
  • Adolf Lumpe:  Philip the Chancellor. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 7, Bautz, Herzberg 1994, ISBN 3-88309-048-4 , Sp. 481-485.

Individual evidence

  1. Proven by Henri Meylan
  2. Inventory: Johannes B. Schneyer, Repertory of the Latin Sermons of the Middle Ages, BGPhMA 43, 4, 818–868
  3. ^ So the judgment of N. Wickis

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