A defence of determinism in late Wyclif attributed to Peter Payne. In this essay is presented the edition of a short tract of natural theology based on the only two extant copies preserved in mss. Praha, Národní knihovna, V.F.9, ff. 68v-75v and Wien, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, 4937, ff. 28r-34v. It is introduced by a historical and philological note. A defence of John Wyclif’s views on future contingents condemned at the Council of Constance in 1415, the tract turns out to be a startling profession of crude determinism, so radical that it would hardly have been upheld by Wyclif even in his later and most controversial writings. The anonymous tract can be plausibly ascribed to Peter Payne, an Oxford Wycliffite who left England possibly to escape prosecution and reached Prague only after Hus’s departure for Constance (11 October 1414). Probably composed from late 1419 to early 1420, when Wyclif’s theological views were the object of harsh criticism by many masters at the University of Prague, the tract has a literary form similar to that of a determinatio, the answer given by a master to a question at the end of a disputation. Hence, it contains eighteen arguments in support of Wyclif’s thesis that “everything that will come to pass, will come to pass by absolute necessity” and six arguments against this thesis, followed by relevant rejections. As to the writing technique, Payne draws a significant amount of textual materials from several sources without citing them: namely Wyclif, Thomas Aquinas, Jan Hus.

Una difesa del determinismo dell'ultimo Wyclif attribuita a Peter Payne / L. Campi. - In: RIVISTA DI STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA. - ISSN 0393-2516. - 70:4(2015), pp. 829-871. [10.3280/SF2015-004007]

Una difesa del determinismo dell'ultimo Wyclif attribuita a Peter Payne

L. Campi
Primo
2015

Abstract

A defence of determinism in late Wyclif attributed to Peter Payne. In this essay is presented the edition of a short tract of natural theology based on the only two extant copies preserved in mss. Praha, Národní knihovna, V.F.9, ff. 68v-75v and Wien, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, 4937, ff. 28r-34v. It is introduced by a historical and philological note. A defence of John Wyclif’s views on future contingents condemned at the Council of Constance in 1415, the tract turns out to be a startling profession of crude determinism, so radical that it would hardly have been upheld by Wyclif even in his later and most controversial writings. The anonymous tract can be plausibly ascribed to Peter Payne, an Oxford Wycliffite who left England possibly to escape prosecution and reached Prague only after Hus’s departure for Constance (11 October 1414). Probably composed from late 1419 to early 1420, when Wyclif’s theological views were the object of harsh criticism by many masters at the University of Prague, the tract has a literary form similar to that of a determinatio, the answer given by a master to a question at the end of a disputation. Hence, it contains eighteen arguments in support of Wyclif’s thesis that “everything that will come to pass, will come to pass by absolute necessity” and six arguments against this thesis, followed by relevant rejections. As to the writing technique, Payne draws a significant amount of textual materials from several sources without citing them: namely Wyclif, Thomas Aquinas, Jan Hus.
Peter Payne; John Wyclif; Jan Hus; University of Prague; Hussitism
Settore M-FIL/08 - Storia della Filosofia Medievale
2015
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/458571
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