Nicole Oresme, Dualist

Authors

  • Jack Zupko University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14640/QuadernidiNoctua5-13

Keywords:

dualism, hylomorphism, substance, soul/body, form/matter, inherence, extension, intellect, sensation, human nature, Aristotelian psychology, Oresme, Buridan

Abstract

According to Nicole Oresme (c. 1320–1382), human beings, unlike all other animals, consist of two substances: a thinking substance and a sensing substance. This paper presents and explores the arguments Oresme uses to arrive at this position, which is unusual in medieval philosophical psychology and which at least superficially – though their methods are completely different – resembles what Descartes concluded about the nature of the human soul and body two and a half centuries later. The paper also considers some moments of ambivalence in Oresme’s presentation, as well as unresolved difficulties, several of which have theological as well as philosophical implications.

Published

2019-02-01

Issue

Section

Quaderni di Noctua