Abstract
Antonius Andreae was one of the most distinguished disciples and disseminators of John Duns Scotus’s doctrines within the Crown of Aragon and his works, which had an outstanding editorial success, can be considered as complete philosophical treatises ad mentem Scoti. This article focusses on his commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics, where Andreae completes and reformulates the metaphysical views of his teacher, which results in a systematic treatise of Scotist metaphysics. To assess the scope of his reformulation and its value, I examine his interpretation of the concept of science and the scientific status of metaphysics as is exposed in the sixth book of this commentary. For it, I present a detailed overview and transcription of his Quaestiones super Metaphysicam Aristotelis VI, which is based on Oxford, Oriel College Library, ms. 65. Please note that an erratum to this article has been published in Bulletin de philosophie médiévale 64 (2022). The erratum is accessible via the following link.