Giles of Lessines OP (died c. 1304) was a thirteenth-century Dominican scholastic philosopher, a pupil of Thomas Aquinas.[1] He was also strongly influenced by Albertus Magnus.[2] He was an early defender of Thomism.[3]
He is also known as an early scientist, and for economic theory, writing on usury[4] and market prices.[5]
Works
Among the works authored by Giles are:
- Commentarium in libros I et II Sententiarum
- De concordia temporum
- De essentia, motu et significatione cometarum
- De geometria
- Epistula Alberto Magno missa
- Summa de temporibus
- De unitate formae
- De usuris
- Quaestiones theologicae
Notes
- ↑ History of Medieval Philosophy 313
- ↑ Albert the Great (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
- ↑ Work 9: The Doctrinal Life and the Thomistic School
- ↑ "Usury, Scriptural Economics and Eschatological Time". Archived from the original on 2007-11-20. Retrieved 2007-10-31.
- ↑ Islam And The Medieval Progenitors Of Austrian Economics
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