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Peter of Spain: Summaries of Logic: Text, Translation, Introduction, and Notes [Hardback]

(, University of California, Los Angeles), (, University of California, Los Angeles), (, University of California, Los Angeles)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 558 pages, height x width x depth: 236x163x37 mm, weight: 972 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199669589
  • ISBN-13: 9780199669585
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 178,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 558 pages, height x width x depth: 236x163x37 mm, weight: 972 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Oct-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199669589
  • ISBN-13: 9780199669585
For nearly four centuries, when logic was the heart of what we now call the "undergraduate curriculum," Peter of Spain'sSummaries of Logic (c. 1230) was the basis for teaching that subject. Because Peter's students were teenagers, he wrote simply and organized his book carefully. Since no book about logic was read by more people until the twentieth century, theSummaries has extensively and profoundly influenced the distinctly Western way of speaking formally and writing formal prose by constructing well-formed sentences, making valid arguments, and refuting and defending arguments in debate. Some books, like the Authorized Version of the English Bible and the collected plays of Shakespeare, have been more influential in the Anglophone world than Peter'sSummaries--but not many. This new English translation, based on an update of the Latin text of Lambertus De Rijk, comes with an extensive introduction that deals with authorship, dating, and the place of theSummaries in the development of logic, before providing a chapter-by-chapter analysis of Peter's book, followed by an analysis of his system from the point of view of modern logic. The Latin text is presented on facing pages with the English translation, accompanied by notes, and the book includes a full bibliography.

Recenzijas

... this is a welcome treatment of a classic text that has long deserved such an outstanding edition, translation, and commentary. * Stephen Read, Journal of the History of Philosophy * ... one of the most exciting contributions to the history of medieval logic in recent years, not because it presents any dramatic discoveries, but because it introduces an important work to a public wider than that of dedicated scholars able to read LatinFuture generations of students and scholars will undoubtedly be grateful to Copenhaver, Normore and Parsons for this splendid publication. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Online * well-presented analysis and translation of Peter of Spain's handbook of logic. It is a valuable tool for students and anyone interested in the history of logic * J. Spruyt, History and Philosophy of Logic * Copenhaver, Normore, and Parsons provide the first complete, reliable translation of one of the most influential logic textbooks ever written * Sara L. Uckelman, Vivarium *

Preface ix
Introduction 1(99)
I Who Wrote the Summaries of Logic?
1(4)
II When Was the Summaries Written?
5(4)
III The Place of the Summaries in the Story of Medieval Logic
9(7)
IV The Audience, Aims, and Structure of the Summaries
16(3)
V The Sources and Content of the Summaries
19(60)
A Sources
19(2)
B Introductions
21(4)
C Predicables
25(2)
D Predicaments
27(4)
E Syllogisms
31(7)
F Places
38(4)
G Suppositions
42(4)
H Fallacies
46(1)
1 Disputation, Dialectic, and Sophistry
46(4)
2 Equivocation
50(2)
3 Accident
52(6)
4 Questions Begged and Refutations Misconceived
58(4)
I Relatives
62(5)
J Ampliations, Appellations, and Restrictions
67(5)
K Distributions
72(7)
VI A Contemporary View of the Summaries
79(7)
A Introductions
79(2)
B Syllogisms
81(1)
C Suppositions
81(2)
D Relatives
83(1)
E Ampliations, Appellations, and Restrictions
83(2)
F Distributions
85(1)
VII The Manuscripts of the Summaries
86(1)
VIII Practices of Translation
87(2)
IX Bibliography and Abbreviations
89(11)
Latin Text
Tractatus I De Introductionibus
100(30)
Tractatus II De Predicabilibus
130(16)
Tractatus III De Predicamentis
146(24)
Tractatus IV De Sillogismis
170(26)
Tractatus V De Locis
196(44)
Tractatus VI De Suppositionibus
240(16)
Tractatus VII De Fallaciis
256(170)
Tractatus VIII De Relativis
426(14)
Tractatus IX De Ampliationibus
440(6)
Tractatus X De Appellationibus
446(2)
Tractatus XI De Restrictionibus
448(16)
Tractatus XII De Distributionibus
464
English Translation with Notes
Chapter 1 On Introductions
101(30)
Chapter 2 On Predicables
131(16)
Chapter 3 On Predicaments
147(24)
Chapter 4 On Syllogisms
171(26)
Chapter 5 On Places
197(44)
Chapter 6 On Suppositions
241(16)
Chapter 7 On Fallacies
257(170)
Chapter 8 On Relatives
427(14)
Chapter 9 On Ampliations
441(6)
Chapter 10 On Appellations
447(2)
Chapter 11 On Restrictions
449(16)
Chapter 12 On Distributions
465(46)
Index of English Words and Phrases 511(17)
List and Index of Latin Words 528
Brian Copenhaver, Distinguished Professor and Udvar-Hazy Chair of Philosophy and History at UCLA, teaches medieval and early modern philosophy. He has written extensively about magic, astrology, the Hermetica, Cabala and their foundations in Neoplatonic, Aristotelian and scholastic philosophy; natural philosophy; scepticism; Averroism; philosophical translation; modern Italian philosophy; historiography; the classical tradition in philosophy; Lorenzo Valla; Marsilio Ficino; Giovanni Pico della Mirandola; Lorenzo de' Medici; Polydore Vergil; Tommaso Campanella; Isaac Newton; Henry More; and Benedetto Croce. He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has held Fulbright, ACLS, Guggenheim and Getty fellowships.

Calvin G. Normore is Professor of Philosophy at UCLA, and at McGill University, Canada.

Terence Parsons is Professor of Philosophy and Linguistics at UCLA. He is the author of Nonexistent Objects (Yale University Press, 1980), Events in the Semantics of English (MIT Press, 1990), and Indeterminate Identity (OUP, 2000).