Talk:William of Ockham

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Editor2020 in topic Occamism

(random heading) edit

(inserted for readability Rursus dixit. (mbork3!) 11:41, 15 February 2010 (UTC))Reply


I have a recollection that Ockham is somehow associated with the paradox that if one goes half the distance to the goal, and then half the distance again, and again and again, one will never get to the goal. Can anyone either confirm of disabuse me of this notion? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.150.96.50 (talkcontribs) 02:14, 3 March 2004

That was Zeno of Elea. -- Heron 09:12, 3 Mar 2004 (UTC)

I am taking out the statement that Ockham was devoted to a life of "minimalism", since this is a post-modern term and didn't really exist in the Medieval context. Perhaps the person who originally called Ockham a minimalist meant "ascetic?" All Franciscans would be ascetics on principle. Jeremy J. Shapiro 19:59, 24 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

While "minimalism" may be a post-modern term, the concept is hardly out of place in the context of the Franciscan poverty controversy. After all, the usus pauper (literally "poor use," but perhaps better translated as "minimal use") controversy -- which was devoted to the issue of whether Franciscans were obliged to only a legal renunciation of ownership, or to make do with a "poor use" of goods (quantitatively and qualitatively) as well -- was an important factor in the clash between John XXII and the so-called Spirituals. (Later John XXII widened his attack and brought the whole Franciscan doctrine of poverty under fire.) At any rate, "asceticism" does not capture the Franciscan devotion to a poor life, which (in theory at least) was certainly more "minimal" than any other Christian profession of voluntary poverty. --24.175.70.90 04:52, 29 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Source for statement about Eco edit

Is the idea that Ockham might be the basis for "In the Name of the Rose" original research, or is there some interview or other statement by Eco that this was his inspiration for his character? Jeremy J. Shapiro 18:51, 9 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

See eg [1]; [2]; [3]; — Preceding unsigned comment added by Briangotts (talkcontribs) 21:08, 9 December 2005

>>> About the Eco reference in "The Name of the Rose": Eco wrote himself in his "Nachschrift zur Name der Rose" (I am referring to the German translation) that he needed a detective for his novel, "preferably an Englishman". He then states that this is an "intertextual reference". This suggests that the actual inspiration for William of Baskerville was probably Sherlock Holmes. However, thinkers like William of Baskerville would have only existed after Roger Bacon and William of Ockham, and this point determined the chronological setting of the novel (1327). Eco comments that the existence of these two men made him have to set the novel a couple of centuries later than he would have liked.

- Brian — Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.56.18.250 (talkcontribs) 20:30, 6 February 2006

I think that the text of this article is a little misleading on this point. Though Eco may have been inspired to create a character with some of the features of Ockham, the article as it stands seems to suggest that Baskerville is a fictionalised version of Ockham (a suggestion reinforced by the coincidence between their names). However, since Ockham is actually referred to by the characters in the novel, it's clear he is distinct from Baskerville. Josh Parsons 21:19, 27 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Fact vs. Myth edit

JA: Since this article has been placed under the aegis of the History of Science, here are some problems that I notice right off with respect to its historical accuracy.

Ockham is considered one of the greatest logicians of all time. One important contribution that he made to modern science and modern intellectual culture was through the principle of parsimony in explanation and theory building that came to be known as Ockham's razor, which states that one should always opt for an explanation in terms of the fewest possible number of causes, factors, or variables.

JA: The first sentence is an example of "peacock phrasing", as further discussed under WP:Weasel. Ockham of course looms large enough to rank as a mythical figure these days, but in the interests of historical accuracy it is all the more necessary to distinguish the things that Ockham actually wrote from the things that are anachronistically attributed to him. The rest of the first paragraph fails to do that.

JA: To some extent we can get by on translations, but it takes a better reader of Latin than I to do an expert job of this, and so I will look up the appropriate tag to place on the article. Jon Awbrey 11:18, 21 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think there are circumstances where, for readability, peacock phrasing is at least less bad than the available alternatives - but it needs to be backed by cited facts, which is not the case here. Ockham's razor seems to have been frequently used by Ockham but it was not original to him and only gained its name centuries later. It certainly needs mentioning in the article, but it should also be clear that the myth outruns the fact. And while the next paragraph to some extent explains why modern philosophers and logicians have found Ockham worth studying, it neither says who they are nor why Ockham was intellectually important in his own period. Rewrite required, but I'd need to do some work before I could attempt it. PWilkinson 18:52, 3 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Surrey? edit

Are we certain of this. I read (admittedly in some pop philosphy thing I no longer have - Xeno and the Tortoise?) that it wasn't known and could have been an Ockham in Yorkshire.84.9.162.36 19:49, 19 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

But where is Ockham in Yorkshire ?

Indeed Bertrand Russell's 'History of Western Philosophy' also reports the view that Ockham was born in Ockham in Yorkshire, and this view can also be seen by googling on 'Ockham Yorkshire'. BUT a key question here is where Ockham in Yorkshire is ? Does anybody know ? It does not seem to appear on any maps, nor in the Domesday Book. Logicus 01:46, 28 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

In a work completely unrelated to William, Ceramic Art in Remote Ages by John B. Waring makes mention of a "Ockham Wold" in Yorkshire in relation to unearthing a cairn and a skeleton. Perhaps then, it is an obscure place in the Yorkshire Wolds. - Moscarlop (talk) 13:59, 18 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Citation Templates edit

JA: Citation templates are not mandated by WP, are not universally agreed to, and many editors strongly object to their use, especially for bibliographies with complex publication histories, because they lead to the loss of data and are hard to maintain. WP guidelines advise against trying to convert citation formats without first discussing the proposal with other editors interested in the arrticle. Thanks, Jon Awbrey 16:46, 26 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

OK thanks for the tip. I thought I was helping. Since we have started the discussion now: what about converting these reference to use the proper templates? Thruston 10:22, 30 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

JA: Any standard style sheet is acceptable for references, so long as a consistent style is maintained across the article. In the literatures that I know, footnotes are used for incidental notes, not references, sources are cited in text as (Source, Date, Page) with Date being optional if there is only one work by Source in the References. The list of references is kept in alphabetical order. This is simple enough to maintain by hand and doesn't really require any automation, but templates have become the pet projects of a couple of groups — so far they are making it more work, not less, to maintain accurate and consistent references, and their rigid formats lead to the loss of citation data over time. This is not a good thing. There is more information about the various options at WP:CITE. Jon Awbrey 12:40, 30 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

Jumping in :) - the cite templates are really not setup to accomodate the complex publishing history of the cites on this page - and their use is not required - they are mostly for us lazy folk who don't want to remember how to punctuate the cite (was that a comma or a period between the author and the title - and what citation system is wikipedia using - crap I have to look it up again). --Trödel 13:29, 30 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

GA Nom Encouraged edit

Dear Friends: If you are interested, this article is near to Good article status. All that is needed would be inline citation of sources and a little work to bring the lead up to WP:LEAD standards. --CTSWyneken(talk) 23:47, 24 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Biography Rewrite edit

I arrived on this page randomly, and was somewhat disturbed by what I found. Much of the section detailing Ockham's life was unsourced speculation, items where historians disagree, or worse. I have rewritten the section using four major sources, which have been referenced on the main page, including works by two doctorate-level, tenured professors. Any information that was in the previous versions that I could not find reliable sources for was removed, but I'll be happy to slide it back into the text if it can be properly verified. Consequentially 04:04, 23 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

Source for Occam quote edit

I would be interested to know the source for the quote “For nothing ought to be posited without a reason given, unless it is self-evident (literally, known through itself) or known by experience or proved by the authority of Sacred Scripture.”Andrew K Robinson 19:18, 13 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

Name spellings edit

His name is spelt differently in this article and the one on his Razor. Both use their version of the spelling for the purposes of the link to the other site, which is different to the spelling used oin that page. Any chance of someone rectifing whioch is correct and/or changing them both to say the same? Larklight 14:40, 16 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

"Ockham" is correct now (i.e. present day), but it would potentially be an anachronism to say that makes it most correct, since William isn't alive now. Since English orthography itself has changed between now and then, this comes down mostly to an arbitrary decision of style. --70.131.120.218 (talk) 07:47, 24 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Date of death uncertain? edit

In his novel , 'Eifelheim', SF writer Michael Flynn includes William Of Ockham as a minor character. In a 'Historical Note' appended to the novel he states, while speaking about the historical William of Ockham:

"He was last heard from when he left Munich on 10 March 1349 to make his peace with the Pope. 'Eifelheim' stands along one likely route. The date on his Denkmal in Munich is incorrect, as we know from documents that he was alive after that point."

Being a note at the end of a work of fiction, this statement is not supported by a citation. Also, things claiming to be 'fact' in novels often are not. Stil, is it possible for anyone with the right expertise to look into the matter of Ockham's death and confirm whether there is, in fact, any ambiguity about it? If the facts mentioned in the entry at wikipedia are subject to reasonable doubt, that ought to be mentioned, perhps with a simple re-wording of the exiting statement that 'Ockham died (possibly of the plague, or Black Death) on April 9, 1348 in the Franciscan convent in Munich, Bavaria.' If the whole thing is a red herring, sorry for wasting time.

Jayaprakash Satyamurthy 05:52, 7 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Regarding Ockham's likely date of death, Knysh's proposal that it was 1348 has not found wide acceptance (and despite being published in 1996, the book itself is a (completely?) unrevised version of his PhD thesis which was submitted in 1968). Gál's article carries much more authority. I suggest that we accept the likely date as 1347 (and, impenitent!). In passing, note that the Cambridge Companion to Ockham accepts this date as well, citing Gál as evidence.

Do you have any reference for where his monument is? I live in Munich and have been trying to find it, if it even exists at all..

Taff. 16.09.14 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.211.197.220 (talk) 21:26, 16 September 2014 (UTC)Reply

Thomistic doctrine: active and passive intellect edit

Under "Ontological Parsimony" the article reads:

" ... advocates against the Thomistic doctrine of active and passive intellect ... "

Would be nice if the link pointed to a new subsection of the Thomism page about the "active and passive intellect" principle. I don't have a good grasp on the matter, so I'll leave the editing to someone else. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Karl gregory jones (talkcontribs) 13:43, 30 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Physics-- views of Occam and Newton on the nature of force and motion edit

I am a physicist, not a historian, but it seemed odd to see Newton quoted as believing inertia, which keeps a body moving in a straight line at constant speed when no external forces are acting on it (Newton's first law) is a "force" (vis) rather than an intrinsic property of the object quite distinct from what are now called forces. If Newton used the same word vis for inertia and for what we now call forces, that distinction between the ancient and modern usage should be explained so as to be less confusing to people who learn their physics from modern textbooks and have never read Newton's Principia.CharlesHBennett (talk) 12:36, 28 May 2010 (UTC)Reply

Year of birth edit

Looking at the article, it appears that he used to have been born in 1285 but that folk have changed that to 1288. However the chnage is only partial. He is still in category:1285 births (a simple chnage I could do) BUT... When I viewed the source of the article page to see if 1285 is referenced anywhere else on the page there is a table of PERSONDATA after the last navbox but, in my browser at least, it is invisible. I don't understand that table and until I do, I'm not going to edit the article. -- SGBailey (talk) 08:37, 7 April 2011 (UTC)Reply

Yeah, I see what you mean. Using WikiBlame, I was able to determine that the change from 1285 to 1288 was made way back in revision 2006-12-30T00:06:47 by an IP user User:142.161.174.18. That IP made a string of 6 edits to the article in the space of less than a month, but hasn't returned to it since. The editor working from that IP, like too many Wikipedians, is also apparently not in the habit of documenting their changes with edit summaries — even when they make unsourced modifications to basic factual data.
Still, in all this time since, nobody's reverted or objected to the change. And since neither the previous "c. 1285" date nor the current "c. 1288" date are backed up by a cited reference, one seems as good as the other. In the interest of consistency, I'm going to update the category and metadata for Ockham's birth/death dates to what's been displayed in the article introduction for over five years, "c. 1288 – c. 1348".
SGBailey, PERSONDATA (WP:Persondata) is an intentionally-invisible metadata template that contains just what it says: a structured set of data elements related to a person. It's meant to consolidate certain basic data points from the article in to a well-defined format for the consumption of scripts and databases, which is why it isn't visible in the article. You should find one on nearly every biographical article in Wikipedia. As I said, it's meant to condense the information in the article, so ideally when an editor is changing information that's reflected in the table, they'd update it to match.
As far as the categories, I don't even know how we can have a Category:1285_births , considering how imprecise records from the time are. Dates are almost always reported as circa whatever year, anyway. I'd personally be more inclined to categorize this in Category:1280s_births (there is one). But I assume the article shouldn't be in two different birth-year categories, and I don't know the relevant policy. So for now I'm adhering to "precedent" (such as it is), and using Category:1288_births. FeRD_NYC (talk) 11:01, 15 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

Chretien de Troyes? edit

Why is Chretien (12th century) listed as one of those possibly "inspired" by Ockham? Unless Ockham had a time machine (unlikely), that's impossible. I'm removing it from the article... Epn10 (talk) 02:29, 5 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

Faith & Reason and Falsely attribuing Irrationalism & Fideism to Ockham edit

"William of Ockham believed "only faith gives us access to theological truths. The ways of God are not open to reason, for God has freely chosen to create a world and establish a way of salvation within it apart from any necessary laws that human logic or rationality can uncover." [11] Ockham's theism was based solely on private revelation and faith (fideism). He believed that only science was a matter of discovery and saw God as the only ontological necessity.[12]"

This section is 100% nonsense! Much secondary material on this issue is misleading and the rubbish quoted here is an example. Ockham offered reasoned arguments for the existence of God, and he nowhere relied "solely on private revelation" as a foundation for his theism. Give a reference to anything Ockham wrote to back up this extraordinary claim! This article should really be written by someone who has read some Ockham (at least Philotheus Bohner's English translation of Selected Philosophical Writings, it's in there!). Ockham was not a Fideist and he did use arguments for God's existence. Protestant commentators who try to make Ockham out to be an antirationalist Lutheran are all alike in not having read Ockham and not referring to his actual writings. This whole article needs a very serious overhaul to make it even worthy to pass the standard of accuracy required for an undergraduate exam! I suggest it be scrapped completely and started from scratch. It doesn't just need tweaking; it is seriously and systematically inaccurate. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.78.253.67 (talk) 13:09, 31 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

Ockham and John XXII edit

"The most uncompromising Franciscans, known as spirituals, believed that Jesus and his apostles owned no personal property" ...No! All Franciscans believed this and the Rule of St. Francis (mentioned nowhere in this entire article) states that Franciscans are to follow Jesus and the Apostles in owning no property either individually or in common. John XXII overturned previous papal pronouncments endorsing The Franciscan Rule. THIS brought the Franciscans into conflict with Pope John XXII.

"After studying the works of John XXII and previous papal statements, Ockham agreed with the Minister General" (that Pope John XXII was a heretic). Then Ockham, Michael and other leading Franciscans fled the papal court. "In return for protection and patronage Ockham wrote treatises..." This is a lie! The treatises were to point out that the Pope has abandoned orthodox Catolicism, and were written at the request of Michael and for a mainly Franciscan audience. "...that argued for emperor Louis to have supreme control over church and state in the Holy Roman Empire." Again, this is simply false. The fact that you can dig up some secondary material saying this is of no consequence. Where does Ockham say this? "For doing this Ockham was solemnly excommunicated by Pope John XXII" No! Ockham and the other Franciscans who joined Michael of Cesena were excommunicated for "Apostacy" for fleeing the papal court at Avignon without papal permission. The article you cite by Paul Vincent Spade actually says this, and yet you cite it as saying he was excommunicated for writing these treatises. You are a charlitan! "...though Ockham was excommunicated,(for apostacy, not heresy) his philosophy was never officially condemned." A.S. McGrade's book The Political Thought of William of Ockham: Personal and Institutional Principles. is refered to here, then why not get all the accurate information from that book, instead of referencing theological misinformation and drivel. Roger Olson's The Story of Christian Theology? Purest Rubbish! Cite Ockham's own works or at least some secondar literature by someone who has actually read what Ockham wrote! This whole article is an absolute embarrassment to history and philosophy. If it were presented to me as an undergraduate essay it would severely struggle to get a passing grade, and for deliberately falsifying citations it would get a failing grade. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.77.101.214 (talk) 15:44, 31 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

Chancellor Lutterell edit

Surely "Jogh Lutterell, the former chancellor of the University of Oxford" (paragraph 2 of Life) and "Oxford chancellor John Lutterell" (paragraph 3) are the same person. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.139.167.43 (talk) 01:20, 26 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

Occam's Razor Falsey Attributed to Occam edit

Why does this article give the false impression that Occam developed "Occam's Razor" when this principle (never stated explicitley by Occam ) was explicitly stated by Aquinas, years before Occam was born? Apples&lemons (talk) 22:29, 8 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

Papal supremacy and Henry VIII edit

This article suggests Ockham "argued against the spiritual and temporal supremacy of the pope, insisting on the independence of the authority of the monarch." I suppose that's covered in the article in his writings for the emperor Louis? That's disputed a few sections above. Is the article exaggerating the importance of Ockham's arguments, or is this something to incorporate here? --BDD (talk) 20:39, 19 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

'William' or 'Ockham' edit

@Str1977: we are in disagreement about whether to address the article's subject with his last name or given name in the article body. The relevant policy is MOS:BIO#Subsequent use. You denied that, with the argument 'it's not a "last name"'. I disagree, but for the sake of discussion, let's pretend "Ockham" was not his last name. That leaves a few questions:

  1. What is his last name?
  2. Why should we use "William", when MOS:BIO explicitly states "Generally speaking, subjects should not be referred to by their given name"
  3. Why should we not use "Ockham", when that is what the sources in the article do?

Paradoctor (talk) 16:47, 4 January 2018 (UTC)Reply

Your objection rests on the false assumption that "William of Ockham" had a family called "Ockham" or "of Ockham".
  1. Back in the day, people didn't yet have family names (last names), at least not in England (the already had them in more urbanized countries like Italy). "of Ockham" is merely a designation where he came from to distinguish him from other Williams. Admittedly, you are not alone in that false assumption.
  2. Why should we use William"? - Because when there is no "last name", there also is no "first name". There's just the name. But we could also use the full name.
  3. Why should we not use "Ockham"? - Because it's a place, not a person. It would be different if the term "the Ockhamite" or something like that were more common. To contrast, Thomas Aquinas has a such derivative form of his hometown in his name. We wouldn't call him "Aquin" or "Aquino" either. In Latin, William could be called "Occamus".

Str1977 (talk) 10:48, 2 February 2018 (UTC)Reply

I strongly support using "William" as "Ockham" is not his surname, but a geographical designation added (by later writers only?) to distinguish him from countless other Williams. See MOS:"X_of_Y"_format. Although it does not specify how to refer to the article subject subsequently within the article, it mentions Stephen of Ripon and Anne of Cleves as examples, and in these two articles the subjects are referred to as "Stephen" and "Anne" respectively. Referring to William of Ockham as "Ockham or "of Ockham" makes no sense, and this article should refer to him simply as "William" unless there is any confusion over which William is meant. BabelStone (talk) 12:01, 2 February 2018 (UTC)Reply

Occamism edit

Why not create a new page for Occamism instead of a redirect to here? (Pseudo-Dionysius the areopagite (talk) 03:58, 20 August 2019 (UTC))Reply

Do you have enough information to build an article? Editor2020 (talk) 00:15, 21 August 2019 (UTC)Reply
Yes.(Pseudo-Dionysius the areopagite (talk) 02:13, 21 August 2019 (UTC))Reply
Then, as far as I'm concerned, you should do it. Editor2020 (talk) 03:00, 21 August 2019 (UTC)Reply