Meaning and inference in medieval philosophy : studies in memory of Jan Pinborg
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Meaning and inference in medieval philosophy : studies in memory of Jan Pinborg
(Synthese historical library, v. 32)
Kluwer Academic Publishers , Sold and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1988
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Note
Bibliography: p. 371-393
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The studies that make up this book were written and brought together to honor the memory of Jan Pinborg. His unexpected death in 1982 at the age of forty-five shocked and saddened students of medieval philosophy everywhere and left them with a keen sense of disappoint ment. In his fifteen-year career Jan Pinborg had done so much for our field with his more than ninety books, editions, articles, and reviews and had done it all so well that we recognized him as a leader and counted on many more years of his scholarship, his help, and his friendship. To be missed so sorely by his international colleagues in an academic field is a mark of Jan's achievement, but only of one aspect of it, for historians of philosophy are not the only scholars who have reacted in this way to Jan's death. In his decade and a half of intense productivity he also acquired the same sort of special status among historians of linguistics, whose volume of essays in his memory is being G. L. Bursill-Hall almost simultane published under the editorship of ously with this one. Sten Ebbesen, Jan's student, colleague, and successor as Director of the Institute of Medieval Greek and Latin Philology at the University of Copenhagen, has earned the gratitude of all of us by memorializing Jan 1 in various biographical sketches, one of which is accompanied by a 2 complete bibliography of his publications.
Table of Contents
On Boethius's Notion of Being: A Chapter of Boethian Semantics.- Logic in the Early Twelfth Century.- The Distinction Actus Exercitus/Actus Significatus in Medieval Semantics.- Denomination in Peter of Auvergne.- Concrete Accidental Terms: Late Thirteenth-Century Debates About Problems Relating to Such Terms as 'Album'.- Concrete Accidental Terms and the Fallacy of Figure of Speech.- The Logic of the Categorical: The Medieval Theory of Descent and Ascent.- Tu Scis Hoc Esse Omne Quod Est Hoc: Richard Kilvington and the Logic of Knowledge.- Logic and Trinitarian Theology: De Modo Predicandi ac Sylogizandi in Divinis.- A Seventeenth-Century Physician on God and Atoms: Sebastian Basso.- Index of Persons.
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