Aristotelian logic, platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West
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Bibliographic Information
Aristotelian logic, platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West
(Variorum collected studies series, CS696)
Routledge, 2016, c2000
- : hbk
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Note
"First published 2000 by Ashgate Publishing. Published 2016 by Routledge"--T.p. verso
"This volume contains viii+384 pages"--P. vii
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Philosophy in the medieval Latin West before 1200 is often thought to have been dominated by Platonism. The articles in this volume question this view, by cataloguing, describing and investigating the tradition of Aristotelian logic in the period, examining its influence on authors usually placed within the Platonic tradition (Eriugena, Anselm, Gilbert of Poitiers), and also looking at some of the characteristics of early medieval Platonism. Abelard, the most brilliant logician of the age, is the main subject of three articles, and the book concludes with two more general discussions about how and why medieval philosophy should be studied.
Table of Contents
- Contents: Introduction
- A survey and a catalogue: Medieval Latin commentaries and glosses on Aristotelian logical texts, before c. 1150 A.D., with a revised working catalogue
- The Carolingian period: Carolingian thought
- Alcuin, the Council of Frankfurt and the beginnings of medieval philosophy
- John Scottus and the 'Categoriae Decem'
- Wulfad, Charles the Bald and John Scottus Eriugena
- John Scottus and Carolingian theology : from the De Praedestinatione, its background and its critics, to the Periphyseon
- Anselm and the early 12th century: Anselm and the early medieval Aristotle
- Glosses and commentaries on the Categories and De interpretatione before Abelard
- Abelard: Abelard's concept of possibility
- Abelard's ethical theory: two definitions from the Collationes
- The Platonisms of Peter Abelard
- The 12th century: Vocalism, nominalism and the commentaries on the Categories from the earlier 12th century
- Gilbert of Poitiers (with a note on the Porretani
- 12th-century Platonism: old paths and new directions
- Approaches to medieval philosophy: The theoretical and practical autonomy of philosophy as a discipline in the Middle Ages: Latin philosophy, 1250-1350
- What is medieval philosophy?
- Index.
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