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The Many Roots of Medieval Logic: The Aristotelian and the Non-Aristotelian Traditions
Paperback

The Many Roots of Medieval Logic: The Aristotelian and the Non-Aristotelian Traditions

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Medieval logic is usually divided into the branches that derived from Aristotle’s organon - the ‘logica vetus’ and ‘logica nova’, and those invented in the Middle Ages, the ‘logica modernorum’. In this volume, a group of distinguished specialists asks whether the ancient roots of medieval logic were not in fact more varied. Stoic logic was mostly lost, but were some of its themes transmitted, even in distorted form, through Boethius and through the grammatical tradition? And did other schools, such as the sceptics and the Platonists, contribute in their own ways to medieval logic?

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Brill
Date
27 November 2007
Pages
262
ISBN
9789004164871

Medieval logic is usually divided into the branches that derived from Aristotle’s organon - the ‘logica vetus’ and ‘logica nova’, and those invented in the Middle Ages, the ‘logica modernorum’. In this volume, a group of distinguished specialists asks whether the ancient roots of medieval logic were not in fact more varied. Stoic logic was mostly lost, but were some of its themes transmitted, even in distorted form, through Boethius and through the grammatical tradition? And did other schools, such as the sceptics and the Platonists, contribute in their own ways to medieval logic?

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Brill
Date
27 November 2007
Pages
262
ISBN
9789004164871