Notes on Contributors
William J. Courtenay is C.H. Haskins Professor Emeritus and Hilldale Professor Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His research interests at present are medieval universities, especially the University of Paris, French social and political history in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries; among his publications are the monographs Adam Wodeham: An Introduction to His Life and Writings, Covenant and Causality in Medieval Thought: Studies in Philosophy, Theology, and Economic Practice.
Stephen D. Dumont is full professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. He has written extensively on the philosophy of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, especially that of John Duns Scotus and his contemporaries.
Marina Fedeli is a lecturer at the University of Macerata, where she conducts research for the critical edition of the Collationes of Duns Scotus.
Wouter Goris holds the Lehrstuhl für Philosophie, insb. des Mittelalters and is director of the Scotus Archiv at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. He has published several books, most recently “Scientia propter quid nobis—The Epistemic Independence of Metaphysics and Theology in the Quaestio de cognitione Dei attributed to Duns Scotus” (Aschendorff, 2022).
Hernán Guerrero Troncoso formerly of Universidad Católica del Maule in Chile, was visiting professor at the Pontifical University John Paul II in Krakow, and now teaches at the Universidad Gabriela Mistral in Chile.
Timothy B. Noone († 2025) was Ordinary Professor and Father Kurt Pritzl, O.P. Chair in Philosophy at the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. He was general editor of the Opera philosophica of John Duns Scotus, co-editor of Duns Scotus Reportatio Parisiensis and has published many essays on Franciscan thought.
Mikołaj Olszewski is Professor in the Department of the History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy in the Institute of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. He has published many studies and editions concerning late medieval theology: among others Dominican Theology at the Crossroads. A Critical Edition and Study of the Prologues to the Commentaries on Peter Lombard’s Sentences by James of Metz and Hervaeus Natalis (Aschendorff: Münster 2010), Quaestiones de productione rerum, de imagine, de anima e schola bonaventuriana (Istituto Storico dei Cappuccini: Roma 2014), and Matthaeus de Cracovia, Rationale divinorum operum (Fundacja Augusta Hr. Cieszkowskiego: Warsaw 2016).
Alessandro de Pascalis is a postdoc at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, working on the critical edition of Duns Scotus’ Reportatio Parisiensis.
Christian Rode teaches at the Institut für Philosophie of the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität. He has published extensively on medieval political philosophy, social ontology, and medieval and early modern metaphysics. His most recent book is Soziale Ontologien des Mittelalters (Aschendorff, 2022).
Witold Grzegorz Salamon PhD, is a regular member of the Commissio Scotistica (since 2007) for the critical edition of the Opera omnia of Blessed John Duns Scotus in Rome (Antonianum).
Chris Schabel (IRHT, CNRS, Aubervilliers) works on later medieval intellectual history and the Latin East, frequently editing source material.
Garrett R. Smith is Akademischer Rat at the Lehrstuhl für Philosophie, insb. des Mittelalters (Bonn), working on the critical edition of Duns Scotus’ Reportatio Parisiensis. He has previously published the Quaestiones de ente of Petrus Thomae (Leuven, 2018).