Garrett
2.4K posts

Garrett
@ViaScoti
Medievalist, Philosopher, Scotist
Bonn, Deutschland Tham gia Aralık 2014
5.1K Đang theo dõi1K Người theo dõi

@NathanH02907868 Probably Peter Auriol, though Thomas Sutton is pretty good as well.
English

@ViaScoti I look forward to this. Who do you think gives the best critique of the formal distinction? Does anyone interact with it in Reformed Scholasticism? I have seen Turretin, Baxter, and van Mastricht indirectly touch on it but no substantial interaction.
English

New book of Scotus studies published: "John Duns Scotus and his Parisian Interlocutors"
brill.com/display/title/…
English
Garrett đã retweet
Garrett đã retweet

I'm all finished painting the illuminated King Arthur book! There's one week left before the drawing; join our lore-crafting club with the Arthuriad between now and then and get entered to win this hand-written illuminated manuscript!
tamburnmanor.com/arthuriad

English
Garrett đã retweet

A beautiful harp to serenade the start of the week . . . 🎶🎶
This intricate initial introduces the first Psalm in our MS 1—a Bible produced in the 13th century.
(@NewCollegeOx, MS 1, f. 178v)
#ManuscriptMonday #Psalm #Medieval #MedievalTwitter

English
Garrett đã retweet
Garrett đã retweet
Garrett đã retweet

@JackBridgesRZ Retrieval needs to better understanding Scotism, Suarism and nominalism so we can properly identify the Reformed positions relative to them. There are too many tropes (e.g. nominalism = modernism = bad) and misunderstandings (e.g. Muller on univocity) out there at the moment.
English

@BeingScots I've heard say that Duns Scotus, Franciscan thinker, philospher & theologian, may have been a primary author of the declaration.
Barberino Val d'Elsa, Toscana 🇮🇹 English
Garrett đã retweet
Garrett đã retweet

National Pet Day in Middle-earth: The Dark Truth Behind Queen Berúthiel’s Cats 🐾
Not every “pet” in Middle-earth was a companion, and nothing shows that more than the cats of Queen Berúthiel.
Berúthiel, the wife of King Tarannon Falastur (the twelfth King of Gondor), lived in the King’s house in Osgiliath—but she was completely out of place there. She hated the sea, despite Gondor’s seafaring culture, and rejected everything tied to status or beauty. She wore only black and silver, avoided all ornament, and lived alone in bare, empty chambers.
Her only companions were nine black cats and one white cat—and even calling them companions doesn’t feel right. She enslaved them and used them as spies, sending them through the city to uncover secrets. They would return to her, and somehow, she could understand them. Even more unsettling, the white cat spied on the others, reporting back to her so that none were ever beyond her control.
Tolkien makes it clear that she tormented them.
Over time, she became feared and hated, and eventually King Tarannon had enough. He set her on a ship with her cats and sent it drifting into the sea before a north wind, and she was never seen again.
Beyond that, Tolkien has never elaborated more on the further happenings of Queen Berúthiel and her menagerie of cats.
This remains one of the darkest and most unsettling glimpses in Middle-earth, and it’s a reminder that even on something like National Pet Day, not every story about “pets” is a happy one.
Art by Steamey 🎨
#lordoftherings #nationalpetday

English
Garrett đã retweet
Garrett đã retweet

Appropriate for the season, I saw this wonderful manuscript from the Cistercian convent at Medingen this morning, made for the nuns' provost, here opened at the Regina Caeli. @bodleianlibs Latin Liturg. e
18, f. 57v-58r.

English
Garrett đã retweet

It’s wild.
“In January, behind closed doors at the Pentagon, Under Secretary of War for Policy Elbridge Colby summoned Cardinal Christophe Pierre — Pope Leo XIV’s then-ambassador to the United States — and delivered a lecture.
“America, Colby and his colleagues told the cardinal, has the military power to do whatever it wants in the world. The Catholic Church had better take its side.
“As tempers rose, one U.S. official reached for a fourteenth-century weapon and invoked the Avignon Papacy, the period when the French Crown used military force to bend the bishop of Rome to its will.” thelettersfromleo.com/p/the-pentagon…
English
Garrett đã retweet

The subtleties of this scene can only be grasped on re-read. The horn is made as the line of Ruling Stewards begins; it breaks as the line ends. As Denethor lifts the horn, he lays down his rod. And Pippin presents him a sword of the North Kingdom whence comes the rightful King.
Malcolm Guite@malcolmguite
For tonight's spell in the library we have a moving scene between Pippin and Denethor! youtu.be/non2P_3AWVY
English

@FeserEdward So far, they have been bridges used by the military: x.com/sentdefender/s…
OSINTdefender@sentdefender
The Israel Defense Force (IDF) has announced a number of strikes on bridges along key ground-lines of communication (GLOC) in central and western Iran. According to the release from the IDF, the strikes targeted 8 bridges used by the IRGC as GLOCs, transporting weapons and other hardware.
English

These are war crimes. Dear U.S. Catholic bishops, politicians, and opinion makers, if you all spoke out loudly en masse, you might just possibly deter the president from committing this evil against the Iranian people and staining the honor of our country. Please do your duty! @USCCB
Andrew Day@AKDay89
"We have a plan... where every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o'clock tomorrow night, where every power plant in Iran will be out of business, burning, exploding, and never to be used again." This is total madness.
English
Garrett đã retweet
























