The Foundation of the Principle of Non-Contradiction. Some Remarks on the Medieval Transformation of Metaphysics
Abstract
There are various ways to describe the transformation that metaphysics underwent in the Middle Ages. One way is to describe this transformation as the purging of all theological reminiscences from ontology, which took place — whether induced by the presence of a theology of revelation in the Latin
West, or not — in the 13th and 14th century. Another way is to describe it as the rise of a transcendental philosophy in the first part of the 13th century, a doctrine of the properties of being as being that transcend the Aristotelian categories; this transcendental philosophy would develop, with Kant, into the system of apriori knowledge of objects. A third way to describe the transformation of metaphysics in the Middle Ages is closely related: as the development of metaphysics into a supertranscendental science.