Dear Denys,
Perhaps Franciscus de Mayronis is Francis of Meyronnes, According to
Gilson, Francis knew Duns Scotus personally and was his student during
Scotus's stay in Paris (1304-1307). He was a Franciscan and died in 1328.
Gilson writes: "For others, such as the Provencal Franciscan Francis of
Meyronnes, their orginality is already more discernible. Among his numerous
writings should be mentioned the commentaries on Porphyry's *Isagoge*, on
the *Categories* , on Aristotle's *Perihermenias* and *Physics*; a
*Commentary on the Sentences*, *Quodlibeta* and a series of treatises,
almost all of them important for the study of his philosophical thought:
*On the Univocity of Being*, *On Transcendentals*, etc.
See E. Gilson, *History of Christian Philosophy in the Middle Ages*,
London,1955, p. 466.
Good luck!
Carolyn Muessig
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