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Methods and Methodologies

Aristotelian Logic East and West, 500-1500
Buch | Hardcover
246 Seiten
2010
Brill (Verlag)
978-90-04-18885-3 (ISBN)
144,45 inkl. MwSt
This book examines the medieval tradition of Aristotelian logic from two perspectives. The first examines the ways in which Latin and Arabic authors went about their work in medieval logic, and how it was related to other intellectual branches. The second invites critical comparison between contemporary and medieval approaches to logic.
Methods and Methodologies explores two questions about studying the Aristotelian tradition of logic. The first, addressed by the chapters on methods in the first half of the book, is directly about the medieval logical commentaries, treatises and handbooks. How did medieval authors in the different traditions, Latin and Arabic, go about their work on Aristotelian logic? In particular, how did they themselves conceive the relationship between logic and other branches of philosophy and disciplines outside philosophy? The second question is about methodologies, the subject of the chapters in the second half of the book: it invites writers to reflect on their own and their colleagues’ practice as twenty-first century interpreters of this medieval writing on Aristotelian logic.
Contributors are Sten Ebbesen, Christopher J. Martin, Christophe Erismann, Andrew Arlig, Simo Knuuttila, Amos Bertolacci, Jennifer Ashworth, Paul Thom, Gyula Klima, Matteo di Giovanni and Margaret Cameron.

Margaret Cameron, Ph.D. (2005) in Philosophy, University of Toronto, is Research Council Chair and Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Victoria. John Marenbon, Ph.D (1979), Trinity College, University of Cambridge, is a Senior Research Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge and Honorary Professor of Medieval Philosophy in the University of Cambridge.

List of Contributors .. vii
Preface .. xi
Methods and Methodologies: An Introduction .. 1
Margaret Cameron

PART ONE: METHODS
The ‘Ontologization’ of Logic. Metaphysical Themes in Avicenna’s Reworking of the Organon .. 27
Amos Bertolacci
Averroes and the Logical Status of Metaphysics .. 53
Matteo di Giovanni
Non Est Natura Sine Persona. The Issue of Uninstantiated Universals from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages .. 75
Christophe Erismann
What Counted as Logic in the Thirteenth Century? .. 93
Sten Ebbesen
Two Summulae, Two Ways of Doing Logic: Peter of Spain’s ‘Realism’ and John Buridan’s ‘Nominalism’ .. 109
Gyula Klima
The Scope of Logic: Soto and Fonseca on Dialectic and Informal Arguments .. 127
E. Jennifer Ashworth

PART TWO: METHODOLOGIES
Interpreting Medieval Logic and in Medieval Logic .. 149
Simo Knuuttila
Is There a Medieval Mereology? .. 161
Andrew Arlig
On Formalizing the Logics of the Past .. 191
Paul Thom
De Interpretatione 5–8: Aristotle, Boethius, and Abaelard on Propositionality .. 207
Christopher J. Martin

Bibliography .. 229
Index .. 241

Erscheint lt. Verlag 26.11.2010
Reihe/Serie Investigating Medieval Philosophy ; 2
Verlagsort Leiden
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 1200 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Mittelalter
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Logik
Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Philosophie des Mittelalters
ISBN-10 90-04-18885-1 / 9004188851
ISBN-13 978-90-04-18885-3 / 9789004188853
Zustand Neuware
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