Pedro Hurtado de Mendoza explained

Honorific Prefix:The Reverend
Region:
Era:17th-century philosophy
Pedro Hurtado de Mendoza
Birth Date:1578
Birth Place:Balmaseda, Spanish Empire
Death Place:Madrid, Spanish Empire
Education:University of Salamanca
Main Interests:Metaphysics, logic, ontology

Pedro Hurtado de Mendoza (1578 – November 10, 1641), also called Puente Hurtado de Mendoza, was a Basque scholastic philosopher and theologian.

Philosophical work

Pedro Hurtado de Mendoza entered the Jesuit order in 1595 in Salamanca. He was a teacher of theology and philosophy in Valladolid and he occupied a chair at the University of Salamanca.

Hurtado belonged to the third generation of Jesuit scholars and initiated the shift from more realist positions of Francisco Suárez and Gabriel Vásquez towards conceptualism,[1] characteristic of that generation. His conceptualist tendencies were further developed by his pupils Rodrigo de Arriaga and Francisco Oviedo. His variously titled volume on scholastic philosophy (last Universa Philosophia) is the earliest example of the genre of Baroque cursus typical of 17th- and 18th-century scholastic philosophy and theology.

Works

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Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Heider, Daniel. Universals in Second Scholasticism. John Benjamins Publishing Company. 2014. 18.