Adam of Bockenfield[1] (c. 1220 – before 1294)[2] was an English Franciscan philosopher, who taught at the University of Oxford in the early 1240s.
[3] He was an early commentator on a number of Aristotle's works, in particular those dealing with natural philosophy.
Adam introduced the New Aristotle at the English university at a time when it was prohibited from being taught in Paris, France because of ecclesiastical restrictions.
It is probable that Adam received a degree in theology and penned his Aristotelian commentaries during his regency in arts which began by 1243.
To answer the question left unanswered by Aristotle, Adam commented that each of the properties reside in the soul as a whole.