William of Ockham was a leading English philosopher and theologian in the fourteenth century who came into controversy with Pope John XXII. His
Dialogus is a survey of a wide range of matters controversial in the Catholic Church in the early fourteenth century.
Topics discussed include the concepts of orthodoxy and heresy and the procedures for deciding whether a person is a heretic, the power of the pope within the Church, the power of the Church in relation to secular government, the constitution of the Church, and the constitution of secular government.
The
Dialogus is an important source of ideas on ecclesiology and political philosophy in the late middle ages. The present volume is concerned with heresy and heretics.