Iste liber videtur esse factus ab Aristotile. Bartholomew of Bruges and the Medieval Reception of the De inundatione Nili
The article explores the medieval reception of the (pseudo?) Aristotelian treatise on the causes of the annual flooding of the Nile known as De inundatione Nili. In particular, it discusses the reception of this treatise in the commentary of Bartholomew of Bruges
Jan Dullaert of Ghent on the Foundations of Propositional Logic
Jeroným Pražský: středověký intelektuál, mučedník české reformace a hrdina národní tradice [Jerome of Prague: Medieval Intellectual, Martyr of Bohemian Reformation and Hero of National Tradition]
Kauzalita činitele
The monograph defends agent causation in the analytic free will debate inspired by the works of T. Pink and T. O'Connor.
Praha: Togga 2020, pp. 200.
Le paradoxe stoïcien: liberté de l'action déterminée
The study presents a new perspective on the notorious problems of Stoic concepts of responsibility, freedom and causal determinism and their mutual compatibility. It challenges certain views which were taken for granted in recent scholarship. As such it offers also a possible new look on the compatibilist theory in general.
Paris: Vrin, 2016.
Les stoïciens et Platon - monistes ou dualistes ?
The article defends the proximity between the early Stoics' and Plato's understanding of the principles and allows thus for an explanation of a systematic ambiguity in both concepts.
Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 102 (2), 2020, 299-323.
Mitteleuropa? Zwischen Realität, Chimäre und Konzept (Europaeana Pragensia 7)
A collective monograph on the phenonomenon of Central Europe from Czech, German, Austrian, Polish and Hungaria perspectives.
Praha: Filosofia 2015.
O habitech v Teologické sumě [On habits in the Summa theologiae]
Czech translation of Aquinas’ treatise on habits from the Summa theologiae with an introductory study.
O prozíravosti v Teologické sumě [On prudence in Summa theologiae], Czech transl. and study
Paolo Barbò da Soncino
Critical edition of the commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics by the Renaissance thomist Paolo Barbò da Soncino;
Rome: Angelicum University Press 2017, pp. 323.