Early life and education
Wodeham was born nearCareer
Between the years 1329 and 1332, Wodeham's work became much more widespread and accessible as a result of lectures he gave at Norwich on Peter Lombard's “Sentences.” The topics at the Norwich lectures were quite diverse. Themes included everything from biblical interpretation to physics. It is important to note that Wodeham gave lectures at Norwich, London, and Oxford. At this point in time, the order and relationship of these lectures appears to be a matter of controversy. Following these lectures at Norwich, sometime immediately after 1330, Wodeham's career advanced and he began to lecture at Oxford. During this portion of his life, Wodeham lectured on theological topics. It is believed that Wodeham elaborated and built upon his Norwich lectures during this time. These lectures became available in Latin only in 1990. Currently, these lectures are the primary work available of Wodeham's. This stage of Wodeham's life at Oxford reached its completion just prior to 1340. It was during Wodeham's time at Oxford that he became most intellectually influential. Apart from the obvious interactions and dialogues that Wodeham had with his colleagues at Oxford, he also became well known in Paris during his Oxford years. As Courtenay points out in his biography on Wodeham, “ most all Parisian authors between 1342 and 1345 cite Wodeham.” Wodeham's work continued to be influential into the beginning of the 16th century.Death
Sometime around 1340 Wodeham left both Oxford and England. During this time away from England, Wodeham traveled for an undocumented period of time. Eventually Wodeham came back to England and died, possibly from the plague, at Babwell Convent in 1358. Not much is known about Wodeham's life after he left Oxford.Works
* Adam of Wodeham, ''Foreword'', in William of Ockham, '' Summa Logicae'', edited by Philotheus Boehner, Gedeon Gál, and Stephen Brown, Saint Bonaventure, NY: Franciscan Institute, 1974. * Adam of Wodeham, ''Lectura Secunda in Librum Primum Sententiarum'' (3 vols.), 1: Prologus et distinctio prima; 2: Distinctiones II-VII; 3: Distinctiones VIII-XXVI edited by Rega Wood and Gedeon Gál, St. Bonaventure, NY: St. Bonaventure University, 1990. * Adam de Wodeham, ''Tractatus de Indivisibilibus'', edited and translated by Rega Wood, Dordrecht: Reidel, 1988.See also
* John Mair * Henry of OytaNotes
References
* Brower-Toland, Susan. “Facts vs. Things: Adam Wodeham and the Later Medieval Debate About Objects of Judgment.” ''The Review Of Metaphysics'' 60, no. 3 (Dec. 2006): 597–642. * Courtenay, William J.. ''Adam Wodeham: An Introduction to His Life and Writings''. London: Leiden, 1978. * Courtenay, William J.. ''Ockham and Ockhamism: Studies in the Dissemination and Impact of His Thought''. Boston: Leiden, 2008 * Gracia, Jorge J.E. and Timothy B. Noone (eds.). ''A Companion to Philosophy in the Middle Ages''. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006. * Pasnau, Robert, (ed.). ''The Cambridge History of Medieval Philosophy''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.External links