Reportatio IV-A
Oleg Bychkov
9781576595329
1420 pages
The Franciscan Institute
Overview
John Duns Scotus began his Parisian lectures on Peter Lombard’s Sentences during the course of the academic year 1302-1303. He was forced to leave Paris in June of 1303 due to a dispute between King Philip IV of France and Pope Boniface VIII. Although there is still some disagreement as to when Scotus returned to Paris (in the fall of 1303, the spring of 1304, or even later in 1304), there is less disagreement about when he lectured on Book IV of the Sentences.1 He began in the spring of 1303 and completed his lectures on Book IV either in the fall of 1303 or the following spring of 1304.
Author Bio
Oleg V. Bychkov is Professor of Theology at St. Bonaventure University, N.Y. He is an expert in ancient languages, ancient and medieval thought, and history of philosophical and theological aesthetics. Dr. Bychkov has published several books, co-edited books, volume of translations, and encyclopedia entries on ancient, medieval, and modern aesthetics and medieval philosophical theology.
R. Trent Pomplun is Associate Professor of Theology at Loyola University Maryland. His historical expertise extends from late medieval to modern thought, with a special emphasis on the Baroque period. He has published extensively on the history of scholastic theology, Catholic missions in Asia, and Indo-Tibetan thought and culture.