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Deleuze adapts the doctrine of univocity to claim that being is, univocally, difference.
Duns struggled throughout his works in demonstrating his univocity theory against Aquinas' analogy doctrine.
The doctrine of the univocity of being implies the denial of any real distinction between essence and existence.
The univocity of being holds that existence is the most abstract concept we have and is applicable to everything that exists.
Gilles Deleuze borrowed the doctrine of ontological univocity from Scotus.
Tifinagh was chosen to be official after consideration of its univocity (one sound per symbol, allowing regional variation), economy, consistency, and historicity.
Nicknamed Doctor Subtilis (the subtle doctor), he is well known for the "univocity of being," the formal distinction, and the idea of haecceity.
" I suggest that such deconstruction of metaphysics as totalizing univocity themselves univocally totalize the nature of metaphysics.
On the other side, several critics accused the music video of animal abuse, and defined the simplicity and univocity of the video a bit cheesy and disappointing.
Likewise, Deleuze claims that univocity is the organizing principle of Spinoza's philosophy, despite the total absence of the term from any of Spinoza's works.
With univocity, however, it is not the differences which are and must be: it is being which is Difference, in the sense that it is said of difference.
Univocity of being is the idea that words describing the properties of God mean the same thing as when they apply to people or things, even if God is vastly different in kind.
This kind of approach is well suited for managing user contents like pictures, audio recordings, movies and text documents but is incompatible with system files (like libraries, commands and configurations) where the univocity of the path is a security requirement to prevent the access to a wrong content.
Derrida extended the problem of presence and absence to include the notion that erasure does not mark a lost presence, rather the potential impossibility of presence altogether - in other words, the potential impossibility of univocity of meaning ever having been attached to the word or term in the first place.
As the Roman Catholic teaching on God's energies and God's essence either taught by Thomas Aquinas and addressed under his teaching Actus Purus, or under Duns Scotus whom taught Aristotle's "being qua being" as the doctrine of the univocity of being.