Peter de Rivo

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Peter de Rivo (Petrus) (died 1499) was a Flemish scholastic philosopher, teaching at Louvain.

His views on future contingents were controversial, being opposed by Henry of Zomeren, also at Louvain[1]. De Rivo went to Rome in 1472 to defend his views to Pope Sixtus IV; they were condemned in 1473[2]. Under pressure from the influence of Cardinal Bessarion to whom Henry had as secretary[3], de Rivo retracted partially his opinions in 1473, and more fully three years later[4]. This meant that views going back at least to Peter Auriol, that future contingents lacked a truth value, had become heretical in the view of the Catholic Church[5].

[edit] Reference

  • Léon Baudry (editor), The Quarrel Over Future Contingents (Louvain, 1465-1475): Unpublished Texts (1989), translated by Rita Guerlac

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ George Henry Radcliffe Parkinson, Stuart Shanker, Routledge History of Philosophy (1999), p. 381.
  2. ^ John Monfasani, Fernando of Cordova: A Biographical and Intellectual Profile (1992), p.36.
  3. ^ Paul Oskar Kristeller, Itinerarium Italicum: The Profile of the Italian Renaissance in the Mirror (1975), p. 226.
  4. ^ Steven Vanden Broecke, The Limits of Influence: Pico, Louvain, and the Crisis of Renaissance Astrology (2003), p. 51.
  5. ^ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, article Medieval Theories of Future Contingents