Calvin Normore offers a very interesting big-picture thesis about the later medieval period, one with multiple components. First, he thinks the first quarters of the thirteenth century�the era of Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas�are �gobsmacked� by the recovery of Aristotle�s work, and hence are �anomalous.� Second he thinks that, once the gobsmacking is over, the philosophers�beginning with Peter John Olivi and onward into the fourteenth century�return to �building upon the insights of the twelfth century��that is, back to the era of Peter Abelard and others. Third, he thinks that this broader movement�what one gets if one sets aside the anomaly of Thomas Aquinas and his era�is characterized by a broader interest in the whole spectrum of ancient philosophical traditions, so that it is not just Aristotelian, but also Platonic and Stoic and Epicurean and much else. Fourth, this broadening movement sees its culmination in the seventeenth century, when the authority of ...
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