Causality and Becoming: Scotistic Reflections

Heythrop Journal 60 (1):95-110 (2019)
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Abstract

Becoming is a process in which a thing moves from one state to another. In Section 1, the study will elaborate on the discussion of the Aristotelian causes taken broadly, primarily focusing on the relation between efficient and final causes. In Section 2, the study discusses the implications of Scotus’s conception of freedom, as it is reflected in the relation of the future to the past, for the efficient and final causalities. Similarly in Section 3 an examination of Scotus’s conception of matter is conducted. Based on the ideas established in these sections, the study attempts to present an initial Scotistic view of becoming.

Author's Profile

Liran Shia Gordon
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (PhD)

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