The Will Discourse in Late Medieval Philosophy and Theology
Michael W Dunne editor Monika Michałowska editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:18th Mar '26
£139.50 was £155.00
This title is due to be published on 18th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This volume sheds light on underexplored aspects of voluntarism that were extensively debated in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century philosophy and theology. By charting a map of complex and multifaceted debates on the will, it provides insight into approaches to ethics and moral psychology that sprouted in the later Middle Ages and sparked various arguments and methods for defending the freedom of the will.
Although interest in medieval ethics has increased in recent years, these studies mainly examine the concept of virtues, happiness, the freedom of the will, and the will-intellect interplay. These studies pay little attention to fourteenth-century ethics and largely neglect theories of action, the conditionality of the will, and the will-time issues. The chapters in this volume illuminate new approaches and reveal the multiple facets of the will-debate that emerged in the late medieval period. They address a wide range of topics such as second-order volitions, non-velle and nolle acts of the will, conditionality of the will, increase and decrease in the intensity of willing, the ethics/metaphysics and ethics/physics intersections, and the role the will played in explaining social and political phenomena.
The Will Discourse in Late Medieval Philosophyand Theology will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working on medieval philosophy and theology, moral philosophy, philosophy of mind, and action theory.
ISBN: 9781032816555
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 453g
344 pages