Extractions: a b c d ... w-x-y-z Baade, Wilhelm Henrich Walter, 1934, 1951, 1952 Babbage, Charles, 1834 Babo, Lambert, 1847 Babylonian mathematicians, 1500 bce Bach, Johann Sebastian, 1704 Bachelard, Gaston, 1934 Back, Ernest E. A., 1912 Backus, John, 1957, 1958 Bacon, Francis, 1605, 1620 Bacon, Francis, 1949 Bacon, Roger, after 1230, 1267 Baekeland, Leo, 1913 Bak, Per, 1986 Baldwin, James Mark, 1896, 1949 Baltimore, David, 1970, 1980, 1982 Banting, Frederick Grant, 1921 Baran, Paul, 1962 Bardeen, John, 1947, 1957 Barghoorn, Elso S., 1977 Barnard, Christian, 1968 Barnea, Anat, 1994 Barrow, Isaac, 1662 Bartholin, Thomas, 1652 Basov, Nikolai Gennediyevitch, 1954
AIM25: University College London: Peckham Manuscript and Wolfgang Hopyl, Paris, 1496), and the Geometria speculatiua of bradwardine (Paris,1495 The manuscript formed part of the library of John thomas Graves (1806 http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=3439&inst_id=13
Biografisk Register Translate this page Rafael (1526-72) Boole, George (1815-64) Borel, Émile (1871-1956) Bourbaki, Nicolas(dekknavn) (fra 1939) bradwardine, thomas (1290-1349) Brahe, Tyco (1546 http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/3736/biografi.htm
Archbishops Of Canterbury 13131327. Simon Mepham. 1327-1333. John Stratford. 1333-1348. thomas bradwardine.1348-1349. Simon Islip. 1349-1366. Simon Langham. 1366-1368. William Whittlesey. http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/archbcntrbury.html
Extractions: Archbishops of Canterbury Name Reign Augustine (Austin) Laurentius (Lawrence) Mellitus Justus Honorius Deusdedit Theodore (Theodorus) Berhtwald (Beorhtweald) Tatwine Nothelm Cuthbert (Cuthbeorht) Bregowine (Breguwine) Jaenberht (Jaenbeorht) Aethelheard Wulfred Feologild Ceolnoth Aethelred Plegmund Aethelhelm Wulfhelm Oda Aelfsige Beorhthelm Dunstan Aethelgar Sigeric Serio Aelfric Aelfheah Lyfing Aethelnoth Eadsige Robert of Jumieges Stigand Lanfranc Anselm Ralph d'Escures William of Corbeil Theobald Thomas Becket Richard of Dover Baldwin Hubert Walter Stephen Langton Richard le Grant Edmund Rich Boniface of Savoy Robert Kilwardby John Pecham Robert Winchelsey Walter Reynolds Simon Mepham John Stratford Thomas Bradwardine Simon Islip Simon Langham William Whittlesey Simon Sudbury William Courtenay Thomas Arundel Roger Walden Thomas Arundel (restored) Henry Chichele John Stafford John Kempe Thomas Bourgchier John Morton Henry Deane William Warham Reformation Thomas Cranmer Reginald Pole Matthew Parker Edmund Grindal John Whitgift Richard Bancroft George Abbot William Laud William Juxon Gilbert Sheldon William Sancroft John Tillotson Thomas Tenison William Wake John Potter Thomas Herring Matthew Hutton Thomas Secker Frederick Cornwallis John Moore Charles Manners Sutton William Howley John Bird Sumner Charles Thomas Longley Archibald Campbell Tait Edward White Benson Frederick Temple Randall Thomas Davidson Cosmo Gordon Lang (from 1942, Baron Lang of Lambeth)
THOMAS Von Buckingham Translate this page und wandte sich gegen den Determinismus und die von zeitgenössischen Oxforder Theologen(insbesondere thomas bradwardine) vertretene Prädestinationslehre. http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/t/thomas_v_buc.shtml
Extractions: Verlag Traugott Bautz www.bautz.de/bbkl Bestellmöglichkeiten des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Zur Hauptseite des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Abkürzungsverzeichnis des Biographisch-Bibliographischen Kirchenlexikons Bibliographische Angaben für das Zitieren ... NEU: Unser E-News Service Wir informieren Sie regelmäßig über Neuigkeiten und Änderungen per E-Mail. Helfen Sie uns, das BBKL aktuell zu halten! Band XI (1996) Spalte 1377 Autor: Franz Wöhrer THOMAS von Buckingham , Englischer Theologe und Kanzler der Diözese von Exeter; + nach 1353. Die genauen Geburts- und Sterbedaten sind unbekannt. - Er stammte aus der Diözese von Lincoln und studierte in Oxford, wo er 1324 Fellow des Merton College war. 1346 promovierte er zum Doktor der Theologie. Im gleichen Jahr wurde er zum Kanzler (d. h. bischöflicher Rechtsberater) der Diözese Exeter bestellt; 1347 wurde er auch Domherr der Kathedrale von Exeter. - In seinen theologischen Schriften (darunter die noch unveröffentlichten »Quaestiones«) verteidigte Th. v. B. die Willensfreiheit und wandte sich gegen den Determinismus und die von zeitgenössischen Oxforder Theologen (insbesondere Thomas Bradwardine) vertretene Prädestinationslehre. Er argumentiert für einen Mittelweg zwischen der Prädestinationslehre des Pelagius, Cicero und Duns Scotus und der christlichen Lehre der Willensfreiheit. Werke : In Sententias (1333-1338); Quaestiones Theologicae (Oxford, New College MS 134; um 1346).
Theological And Philosophical Biography And Dictionary bradwardine See bradwardine, thomas bradwardine, thomas (12901349) Professorof divinity and mathematics at Oxford; archbishop of Canterbury; against http://theology.freeyellow.com/tdicb.htm
Extractions: Bacon, Francis : (1561-1626) the father of modern science; mother was a Calvinist ; wrote Novum Organum . His method was to gather facts and then draw theories from them ( Inductive Method). He was not a great scientist, but his writings helped scientific progress. His book The New Atlantis was a political fable, but in it he describes many later inventions (does that make him a science fiction writer?) He was a lawyer and then a judge. He was accused of taking bribes in 1621 (but all judges did so in that day) and confessed to some of the charges. Because King James I liked him, the fine of 40,000 pounds was erased.
The Reformati9on Candle - Part 2. THAT IS NEVER EXTINGUISHED. Part 2. thomas bradwardine (c. 12901349) Doctor Profundus. thomas bradwardine reaches his last and eternal haven. http://www.go-newfocus.co.uk/articles/reformationcandle2.htm
Extractions: THE REFORMATION CANDLE THAT IS NEVER EXTINGUISHED Part 2 Thomas Bradwardine (c. 1290-1349) : Doctor Profundus Doctor Profundus . Church historian Thomas Fuller (1608-1661)3 calls Bradwardine the greatest man to occupy the Seat of Canterbury since the time of Anselm (1033-1109) and before the time of Cranmer (1489-1556) and looks upon his saintly life and the way God led him in his career as little less than miraculous. He explains how the people of England put their countrys progress and international fame at this time down to Bradwardines prayers rather then Edward IIIs military and diplomatic skill. John Wycliffe revered Bradwardine and was obviously highly influenced by him in his doctrines of grace, in particular his teaching on faith, justification, election and predestination. Frenchman Jean Charlier Gerson (1363-1429), author of The Reformation of Theology , defender of Christs virgin birth and denier of papal infallibility, leant heavily on Bradwardines works. This was one of the reasons Gerson became known as Doctor Christianissimus The poet Chaucer (c. 1340-1400) wrote of Bradwardine in his famous
Extractions: AUG Richard Kilvington (we know almost seventy different spellings of his name) was born at the beginning of the fourteenth century in the village of Kilvington in Yorkshire. He was the son of a priest from the diocese of York. He studied at Oxford, where he became Master of Arts (1324/1325) and then Doctor of Theology (ca. 1335). His academic career was followed by a diplomatic and ecclesiastical one. He was in the of service of Edward III and took part in diplomatic missions, culminating in his service as Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in London. Along with Richard Fitzralph, Kilvington was involved in the battle against mendicant friars. It seems that Kilvington's argument with mendicants continued almost until his death in 1361. Except for a few sermons, all of Kilvington's known works stem from his lectures at Oxford, and none of these uses the typical late-medieval style in question commentaries, which followed the order of books in the respective works of Aristotle. Rather, in accordance with the fourteenth century Oxford practice, Kilvington reduces the number of topics discussed to some central and probably most important subjects, each of which is constructed as a set of fully developed questions, no more than 10 in each set. This reduction in the range of topics is offset by a lengthier and much more detailed analysis of the particular questions chosen for treatment, some of which print to over 120 pages in modern editions. His philosophical works, the
Albert Of Saxony Entry from the Stanford Encyclopedia; by Joël Biard.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers Albert of Saxony Related Entries. bradwardine, thomas Burley Burleigh, Walter Heytesbury, William Ockham Occam, William Acknowledgements. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/albert-saxony/
Extractions: JAN Albert of Saxony (ca. 1316-1390), Master of Arts at Paris, then Rector of the University of Vienna, and finally Bishop of Halberstadt (Germany). As a logician, he was at the forefront of the movement that expanded the analysis of language based on the properties of terms, especially their reference (in Latin: suppositio ), but also in the exploration of new fields of logic, especially the theory of consequences. As a natural philosopher, he worked in the tradition of John Buridan, and contributed to the spread of Parisian natural philosophy throughout Italy and central Europe. Albert of Saxony ( Albertus de Saxonia ), whose family name was Albert of Ricmerstop or Rickmersdorf, is sometimes called Albertucius (Little Albert), to distinguish him from the 13 th -century theologian Albert the Great. He was born at Helmstedt in present-day Germany around 1316. After initial schooling in the region of Helmstedt, and possibly a sojourn at Erfurt, he made his way to Prague and then on to Paris, where he became a master of arts in 1351. He was Rector of the University of Paris in 1353. He remained in Paris until 1362, during which time he taught arts and studied theology at the Sorbonne, apparently without obtaining any degree in the latter discipline. His logical and philosophical works were composed during this period. After two years of apparently carrying out diplomatic missions between the Pope and the Duke of Austria, he was charged with founding the University of Vienna, of which he became the first Rector in 1365. Appointed canon of Hildesheim in 1366, he was also named Bishop of Halberstadt the same year, fulfilling that office until his death, July 8, 1390.
Untitled THE NEGLECTED thomas bradwardine In 1320 AD, thomas bradwardine (12901349), studiedat Merton College Oxford and became chancellor of St. Paul's Cathedral. http://members.fortunecity.com/jonhays/bradwardine.htm
Extractions: web hosting domain names email addresses related sites THE NEGLECTED THOMAS BRADWARDINE In 1320 A.D., Thomas Bradwardine (1290-1349), studied at Merton College Oxford and became chancellor of St. Paul's Cathedral. Bradwardine was a noted mathematician as well as theologian, known as 'the profound doctor'. Bypassing both the Platonic and Aristotlean traditions, Bradwardine studied bodies in uniform motion and ratios of speed in the treatise De proportionibus velocitatum in motibus (1328). Bradwardine was also one of the "Oxford Calculators", studying mechanics with William Heytesbury, Richard Swineshead, and John Dumbleton. The Oxford Calculators distinguished Kinematics from Dynamics. Their studies emphasized Kinematics, and included the investigation of instantaneous velocity. They were the first to enunciate the Mean Speed Theorem: a body traveling at constant velocity will cover the same distance in the same time as an accelerated body if its velocity is half the final speed of the accelerated body . They also demonstrated this theorem the essence of "The Law of Falling Bodies" long before Galileo is credited with this. In Tractatus de proportionibus (1328), Thomas Bradwardine extended Eudoxus'
Untitled Circa 1320 AD, mathematician thomas bradwardine (12901349) of Merton College Oxfordbypassed both the Platonic and Aristotlean traditions regarding bodies in http://members.fortunecity.com/jonhays/revart.htm
Extractions: web hosting domain names email addresses related sites RENAISSANCE: REBIRTH AND REVOLUTION IN ART AND LITERATURE The French Renaissance built on the preservation of learning from previous decades. Seminal were the Universities of Paris, comprising 13 state-supported autonomous units, primarily in Paris. The University of Paris, as initially known, was instituted about the middle of the 12th century. It comprised several schools associated with the Cathedral of Notre Dame, the bishop of Paris presiding over the institutions and their faculties. Among early noted scholars at the university were philosopher Peter Abelard and theologian Thomas Aquinas. In the 13th century it presented four faculties: theology, medicine, canon law, and arts. The arts faculty was subdivided into "nations", for the nationalities of teachers and students. The French Religious Civil Wars of the 16th and 17th centuries resulted in decline of the university's academic reputation, while increasing its political influence, as its colleges led in the religious persecutions during the Reformation. We note elsewhere that the great French historian, Jules Michelet (x-y), in his epochal work
Britannia Biographies: Boniface Of Savoy, Archbishop Of Canterbury thomas was born in Sussex and studied at the College which Walter de Merton About1335, bradwardine was summoned to London to assist Richard de Bury, Bishop of http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/tbradwardine.html
Extractions: Thomas was born in Sussex and studied at the College which Walter de Merton had recently founded in Oxford. His learning as a theologian, a philosopher and a mathematician, earned for him the title of Doctor Profundus. The distinguishing mark of his teaching was the stress which he laid on the foreknowledge of God and the need of divine grace, and this is referred to by Chaucer in his Nun's Priest's Tale. He became Proctor of the University and, in that capacity, took part in resisting the claim of certain unscrupulous people to farm the revenues of the Archdeaconry of Oxford, which was held by the Cardinal of St. Lucia, although he neglected to perform the duties of the office. In 1349, he was elected to the See of Canterbury and, after his consecration at Avignon, he hastened back to England where the Black Death was raging. But a few days after his arrival, he died of the plague in London. His body was removed to Canterbury and laid in the Cathedral.
Britannia Resources: Archbishops Of Canterbury Britannia gives a list of the archbishops from 597 to the present, with biographies of all those before Category Regional Europe Society and Culture Religion Kilwardby Robert Burnell John Pecham Robert Winchelsey thomas Cobham Walter ReynoldsSimon Mepeham John Stratford John Offord thomas bradwardine Simon Islip http://www.britannia.com/history/resource/archbish.html
KCL: Medieval Theology William Ockham. Other thinkers such as Richard of St Victor, Gregoryof Rimini and thomas bradwardine will also be studied. The topics http://www.kcl.ac.uk/depsta/humanities/medieval/medthe.html
Extractions: Through lectures, the course will outline the main theological and philosophical controversies of the medieval period and explain how a coherent picture of events may be derived from the range of primary sources that survive. The differing positions of Jewish, Islamic and Christian thinkers will be explored and analysed. In their own time, and by way of preparing for the classes, students will be expected to study particular texts in order to enhance their understanding of the methodological issues involved, and to develop their appreciation of the medieval period.
Il Giardino Di Archimede bradwardine, thomas- Geometria speculativa. bradwardine, thomas - Arithmetica et Geometria . http://www.math.unifi.it/archimede/archimede/CD_rom/elenco_CD.html
Review: Poster / Utz, Constructions Of Time Wilks Dolnikowski of The Church of Our Savior, Brookline, Massachusetts, De MemoriaArtificiali Time and Memory in the Thought of thomas bradwardine; and JD http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/uni/nes/prolepsis/98_4_eis.html
Extractions: Carol Poster and Richard J. Utz eds. Constructions of Time in the Late Middle Ages Disputatio 2). Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1997. 206 p, 9 black-and-white figures. ISBN: 0-8101-1541-7 Published 15.3.1998 The second volume of Disputatio Chronographiae Libro del saber de astrologia ;" Thorsteinn Vilhjalmsson of the University of Iceland, "Time and Travel in Old Norse Society;" Samer Akkach of the University of Adelaide, "Ibn Arabi's Cosmogony and the Sufi Concept of Space and Time;" Ian Wilks of Erindale College, University of Toronto at Mississauga, "The Use of Synchronic Contingency in Early Fourteenth Century Debate over the World's Temporal Duration;" Chris Schabel of the University of Cyprus, "Aufredo Gonteri Brito secundum Henry of Harclay on Divine Foreknowledge and Future Contingents;" Edith Wilks Dolnikowski of The Church of Our Savior, Brookline, Massachusetts, " De Memoria Artificiali : Time and Memory in the Thought of Thomas Bradwardine;" and J.D. Alsop, of McMaster University, " Thirty Days Hath September ": Oral Rendition of Time in Sixteenth-Century England."
C.E. 1000 - 1499 thomas bradwardine (1325 CE) bradwardine studied at Merton CollegeOxford, in 1337 he was made chancellor at St Paul's Cathedral. http://nunic.nu.edu/~frosamon/history/ce1499.html
A Curious Paradigm Of Chaucer's Bishop Bradwardine the famous town on the border of England and Scotland, is Ber(e)wick a place wherebarley is grown. In the two copies of thomas bradwardine's treatise on http://www.arts.uwo.ca/florilegium/vol-xi/rowland.html
Extractions: In the Middle English Dictionary NPT The passage under scrutiny is Bradwardine's instruction for remembering the conquest of Berwick-on-Tweed by Edward III in 1333. In the shorter of the two manuscripts, MS. Sloane 3744, fol. 8v, in the British Library, the sentence to be memorized reads: "Benedictus Dominus, qui Berewicum regi Anglie subiugauit" (Blessed be the Lord who subjugated Berwick for the King of England). In the other manuscript, MS. McClean 169, fol. 256r, in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, the sentence reads: "Benedictus Dominus, qui pro rege Anglie Berwicum fortissimum et totam Scociam subiugavit" (Blessed be the Lord who for the King of England subjugated strongest Berwick and the whole of Scotland).
Catalogue 150W Recent Acquisitions 13. Author bradwardine, thomas. Title Geometria speculativa simulcum quodam tractatu de quadratura circuli noviter edito. Publisher http://www.worldbookdealers.com/dealers/jonathanahill/ct/ct0000000405.asp