In this American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly article, Noone argues that Bonaventure's theory of angelic cognition anticipates the fourteenth century theory of intellectual intuitive cognition.
Learn MoreThis lecture, presented as part of the Etienne Gilson Lecture Series at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies in Toronto, outlines how medieval cognitive theory was interdisciplinary, combining a treatment of humans and angels.
Learn MoreThis chapter in A Companion to Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann analyzes and places into historical context Scotus's theory of angelic minds.
Learn MoreA chapter by Noone in The Newman-Scotus Reader: Contexts and Commonalities, edited by Edward J. Ondrako, 97�108. New Bedford, Mass.: Academy of the Immaculate.
Learn MoreA chapter by Noone in The Newman-Scotus Reader: Contexts and Commonalities, edited by Edward J. Ondrako, 227�37. New Bedford, Mass.: Academy of the Immaculate
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