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William of Ockham

From Wikitheism

William of Ockham (c. 1287–1347) was a Christianity philosopher and theologian associated with major debates, teachings, or movements in the history of theism.

Overview

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William of Ockham influenced late medieval theology through nominalism, divine freedom, logic, and political thought. This starter article is intended as a neutral biographical entry for Wikitheism and should be expanded with reliable historical, theological, and academic sources.

Contributions to theistic thought

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Key areas of relevance include:

  • Concepts of God, gods, ultimate reality, revelation, devotion, or divine action
  • The relationship between faith, reason, practice, ethics, and community
  • Influence on later religious traditions, schools, movements, or philosophical debates

See also

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References

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