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1980, ISBN: 9027710791

[EAN: 9789027710796], Neubuch, [SC: 0.0], [PU: Springer Netherlands], GESCHICHTE; HISTORIE; CHRISTOPHERCOLUMBUS; ENGLISHLITERATURE; MARSILIUSOFINGHEN; CHURCH; CONCEPT; INFINITIVE; INTENTI… Meer...

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Peter of Ailly: Concepts and Insolubles : An Annotated Translation - nieuw boek

ISBN: 9027710791

[EAN: 9789027710796], Neubuch, [SC: 0.0], [PU: Springer Netherlands], GESCHICHTE; HISTORIE; CHRISTOPHERCOLUMBUS; ENGLISHLITERATURE; MARSILIUSOFINGHEN; CHURCH; CONCEPT; INFINITIVE; INTENTI… Meer...

NEW BOOK. Verzendingskosten:Versandkostenfrei. (EUR 0.00) AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany [51283250] [Rating: 5 (von 5)]
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Peter of Ailly: Concepts and Insolubles - gebonden uitgave, pocketboek

ISBN: 9789027710796

2 Peter of Aillyl wrote his Concepts and Insolubles, according to the best 3 estimate, in 1372. He was at that time only about twenty-two years old. He was born around 1350" in Compiegne … Meer...

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2 Peter of Aillyl wrote his Concepts and Insolubles, according to the best 3 estimate, in 1372. He was at that time only about twenty-two years old. He was born around 1350" in Compiegne … Meer...

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Peter of Ailly: Concepts and Insolubles An Annotated Translation - Spade, P. V. (Herausgeber)
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Peter of Ailly: Concepts and Insolubles An Annotated Translation - gebonden uitgave, pocketboek

1980, ISBN: 9027710791

1980 Gebundene Ausgabe Geschichte, Historie, knowledge; Literature; Media; Notation; politics; reason; writing; ChristopherColumbus; englishliterature; MarsiliusofInghen; church; concep… Meer...

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EAN (ISBN-13): 9789027710796
ISBN (ISBN-10): 9027710791
Gebonden uitgave
Verschijningsjaar: 2007
Uitgever: Kluwer Academic Publishers
212 Bladzijden
Gewicht: 0,485 kg
Taal: eng/Englisch

Boek bevindt zich in het datenbestand sinds 2007-04-17T20:52:55+02:00 (Amsterdam)
Detailpagina laatst gewijzigd op 2023-12-16T14:42:26+01:00 (Amsterdam)
ISBN/EAN: 9789027710796

ISBN - alternatieve schrijfwijzen:
90-277-1079-1, 978-90-277-1079-6
alternatieve schrijfwijzen en verwante zoekwoorden:
Auteur van het boek: pierre ailly paul vincent spade, peter vincent, constance martin
Titel van het boek: ally, inso, reidel, historical band, pierre ailly, would you like know peter, concepts and insolubles, history and philosophy logic, little peter


Gegevens van de uitgever

Auteur: P.V. Spade
Titel: Synthese Historical Library; Peter of Ailly: Concepts and Insolubles - An Annotated Translation
Uitgeverij: Springer; Springer Netherland
196 Bladzijden
Verschijningsjaar: 1980-06-30
Dordrecht; NL
Gewicht: 1,050 kg
Taal: Engels
106,99 € (DE)
109,99 € (AT)
118,00 CHF (CH)
POD
XIII, 196 p.

BB; History, general; Hardcover, Softcover / Geschichte; Geschichte; Verstehen; Christopher Columbus; English literature; Marsilius of Inghen; church; concept; infinitive; intention; knowledge; literature; media; notation; politics; reason; translation; writing; History; Geschichtsschreibung, Historiographie; BC; EA

Translation.- Concepts.- I. Introductory considerations (pars. 1–9).- A. Division of terms into mental, spoken and written (par. 1).- B. General definition of ‘Term’ (pars. 1–3).- C. Analysis of the phrase ‘vital change’ (pars. 4–7).- D. Two senses of ‘to be a sign of some thing’ (pars. 8–9).- II. Mental terms (pars. 10–54).- A. Complex and incomplex mental terms (par. 10).- B. Categorematic and syncategorematic mental terms, in signification and in function (pars. 11–15).- C. Mental terms properly and improperly so called (pars. 16–20).- D. First and second intentions (pars. 21–30).- E. Mental terms properly so called signify naturally only (par. 31).- F. Two senses of ‘to signify naturally’ (pars. 32–33).- G. Mental terms syncategorematic in signification (par. 34).- H. Against the modistae (pars. 35–40).- I. Absolute and connotative mental terms properly so called (pars. 41–54).- a. The connotation of the term ‘concept’ (pars. 51–54).- III. Spoken terms (pars. 55–88).- A. Analysis of the phrase ‘utterance that signifies by convention’ (pars. 55–62).- B. Ultimate and non-ultimate conventional signification (pars. 63–68).- a. Supposition of spoken terms and mental terms properly so called (pars. 67–68).- C. Categorematic and syncategorematic spoken terms (pars. 69–73).- D. Spoken terms of first and second imposition or intention (pars. 74–80).- E. Absolute and connotative spoken terms (par. 81).- F. Against the modistae (pars. 82–88).- IV. Written terms and mental terms improperly so called (par. 89).- Insolubles.- I. Introduction (pars. 90–91).- A. Program of the treatise (par. 91).- II. Chapter One: What a sentence is (pars. 92–137).- A. Program of Ch. 1 (par. 92).- B. Subordination among spoken, written and mental sentences (par. 93).- C. Mental sentences properly and improperly so called (pars. 94–96).- D. Descriptions of various senses of ‘sentence’ (pars. 97–98).- E. Are mental sentences properly so called composed of parts? (pars. 99–137).- 1. Introductory remarks (par. 99).- 2. Gregory of Rimini’s view: They are never composites (pars. 100–111).- 3. Peter’s own view (pars. 112–137).- a. Introductory remarks (par. 112).- b. The composition or non-composition of mental sentences properly so called (pars. 113–128).- i. Conclusion 1: Mental hypothetical are composites (pars. 113–118).- ii. Conclusion 2: Mental categoricals are not composites (pars. 119–124).- iii. Conclusion 3: Mental expressions ought not be called ‘complex’ because they are really composites (pars. 125–128).- c. Why a mental expression should be called complex (pars. 129–136).- i. Conclusion 4: Not because it is equivalent in signifying to the several utterances or inscriptions that make up a spoken or written expression (pars. 129–130).- ii. Conclusion 5: Not-because it signifies a composition or division among beings (pars. 131–134).- iii. Conclusion 6: Rather because it is equivalent in signifying to several acts of knowing (pars. 135–136).- d. Closing remarks (par. 137).- III. Chapter Two: Truth and falsehood in general (pars. 138–238).- A. Introductory remarks (pars. 138–139).- B. Bad reasons for calling sentences true or false (pars. 140–147).- 1. Conclusion 1: Because they signify what is true or false externally (pars. 140–143).- 2. Conclusion 2: Because of the supposition of their subjects and predicates (pars. 144–147).- C. Why sentences signifying by convention should be called true or false, possible or impossible (pars. 148–157).- 1. Conclusion 3: Their truth or falsehood is based on the truth or falsehood of a corresponding mental sentence properly so called (pars. 148–152).- a. Corollary 1: A conventionally signifying sentence can be true and false at the same time (par. 150).- b. Corollary 2: Such a sentence is distinct from its own truth or falsehood (par. 151).- c. Objection to Corollary 1, with reply (par. 152).- 2. Conclusion 4: The possibility or impossibility of such sentences is based on the possibility or impossibility of a corresponding mental sentence properly so called (pars. 153–157).- a. Corollary 1: The spoken sentence ‘No spoken sentence is true’ is possible (par. 155).- b. Corollary 2: But it cannot be true (par. 156).- c. Problem and reply (par. 157).- D. Why mental sentences properly so called are true or false, possible or impossible (pars. 158–178).- 1. Introduction to Conclusions 5 and 6 (par. 158).- 2. Conclusion 5: Rule for truth and falsehood of mental sentences properly so called (pars. 159–164).- a. Corollary 1: The cause of the truth of an affirmative is not the same as the cause of the falsehood of the corresponding negative (par. 161).- b. Corollary 2: No mental sentence properly so called can be true and false at the same time (par. 162).- c. Corollary 3: Mental sentences properly so called are identical with their truth or falsehood (par. 163).- d. Corollary 4: The cause of the truth or falsehood of such sentences is the same as the cause of their modal quality (par. 164).- 3. Conclusion 6: Rule for possibility and impossibility of mental sentences properly so called (pars. 165–166).- 4. Further clarification of Conclusions 5 and 6 (pars. 167–170).- 5. Corollaries from Conclusions 4 and 6 (pars. 171–178).- a. Corollary 1 (par. 171).- b. Corollary 2 (pars. 172–174).- i. Objection to Corollary 2, with reply (pars. 173–174).- c. Corollary 3 (par. 175).- d. Corollary 4 (pars. 176–178).- i. Objection to Corollary 4, with reply (par.178).- E. Three doubts about the total significate of a sentence (pars. 179–238).- 1. First doubt: What is the total or adequate significate of ‘Every man is an animal’? (par.179).- 2. Second doubt: It seems that there is something true or false besides true or false sentences (pars. 180–182).- a. First argument: E.g., God and God’s knowledge (par. 180).- b. Second argument: Before the creation, it was true that the world was going to exist (par. 181).- c. Third argument: If no sentence existed, it would be true that no sentence existed (par. 182).- 3. Third doubt: Something impossible must be the significate of an impossible sentence (par. 183).- 4. Program for the rest of Chapter two (par. 184).- 5. Gregory of Rimini’s theory of ‘complexly significables’ (pars. 185–189).- 6. Refutation of Gregory’s view (pars. 190–209).- a. Conclusion 1: There are no complexly significables in Gregory’s sense (pars. 191–195).- b. Conclusion 2: Everything is, in a sense, complexly significable (pars. 196–197).- c. Conclusion 3: Nothing is the adequate or total significate of a mental sentence properly so called (pars. 198–199).- d. Conclusion 4: A mental sentence properly so called signifies exactly what its parts signify, or the parts of the corresponding spoken sentence. Yet the sentence as a whole signifies in some way that is not signified by any part (pars. 200–201).- e. Conclusion 5: Contradictory sentences signify exactly the same things, but in different ways (pars. 202–203).- f. Conclusion 6: No dictum of a mental sentence properly so called supposits for anything if taken significatively (pars. 204–209).- 7. Reply to doubts (pars. 210–238).- a. To the first doubt, in par. 179: Nothing is the total significate (pars. 210–221).- i. How to treat infinitives (pars. 213–221).- ?. Conclusion 1 (pars. 213–215).- ?. Conclusion 2 (pars. 216–218).- ?. Conclusion 3 (par. 219).- ?. Conclusion 4: Infinitives should be used only where ‘that’-clauses can be used (pars. 220–221).- b. To the second doubt, in pars. 180–182 (pars. 222–234).- i. Created and uncreated truths (pars. 222–228).- ?. Conclusion 1: There is a truth outside the soul in addition to created sentences (pars. 222–223).- ?. Conclusion 2: There is no truth outside the soul besides created and uncreated sentences (pars. 224– 225).- ?. Conclusion 3: God is a true sentence (pars. 226–228).- ii. Reply to first argument, in par. 180: God is an uncreated sentence (par. 229).- iii. Reply to second argument, in par. 181: That truth was then God (pars. 230–231).- iv. Reply to third argument, in par. 182: The antecedent is impossible (pars. 232–234).- ?. Objection and reply: What about eternal falsehoods? (pars. 233–234).- c. To the third doubt, in par. 183 (pars. 235–238).- i. One reply: The inference is invalid (par. 235).- ii. An alternative reply: To concede the inference and to deny that it requires the existence of impossibles (pars. 236–237).- iii. Comparison of the two replies: The first is preferable (par. 238).- IV. Chapter Three: Sentences having reflection on themselves (pars. 239–336).- A. Introductory remarks (par. 239).- B. Descriptions (pars. 240–252).- 1. Description 1: Signification (par. 240).- 2. Description 2: Sentence having reflection on itself (par. 241).- 3. Description 3: Insoluble sentence (par. 242).- 4. Corollaries from descriptions (pars. 243–252).- a. Corollary 1: Self–reference requires a term signifying a sentence (par. 243).- b. Refutation of earlier views (pars. 244–252).- i. Corollary 2: Not every sentence signifies itself to be true (pars. 244–246).- ii. Corollary 3: Against Marsilius of Inghen (pars. 247–248).- iii. Corollary 4: Not every sentence has two significations, one material and one formal, against Marsilius (pars. 249–250).- iv. Corollary 5: Against Marsilius (par. 251).- v. Corollary 6: Many sentences thought to be insolubles are not, against Marsilius and others (par. 252).- C. Distinctions: Various kinds of self-reference (pars. 253–261).- 1. Distinction 1: Some self–referential sentences signify themselves to be false, others do not (pars. 253–254).- 2. Distinction 2: Some of the former do so independently of every situation, others do not (pars. 255–256).- 3. Distinction 3: Some of the former do so directly, others indirectly (par. 257).- 4. Distinction 4: Some of the latter do so immediately, others by means of others sentences (par. 258).- 5. Distinction 5: Some of the latter do so by means of sentences they themselves signify, others rather by means of sentence by which they are signified to exist (par. 259).- 6. Distinction 6: Some of the former do so by means of sentences of which they are parts, others do not (par. 260).- 7. Summary (par. 261).- D. Corollaries from distinctions (pars. 262–271).- 1. Corollary 1 (par. 262).- 2. Corollary 2 (pars. 263–270).- a. Objection and reply (pars. 264–270).- 3. Corollary 3 (par. 271).- E. Which kinds of sentences can have reflection on themselves? (pars. 272–336).- 1. Introductory remarks (par. 272).- 2. Assumptions about formal and objective signification (pars. 273–280).- a. Assumption 1: Two kinds of signification: objective and formal (par. 273).- b. Assumption 2: Definition of each kind (par. 274).- c. Assumption 3: Anything can signify itself objectively (par.275).- d. Assumption 4: Nothing can distinctly signify itself formally (pars. 276–277).- e. Assumption 5: Spoken and written sentences signify only objectively (par. 278).- f. Assumption 6: Spoken and written sentences signify themselves first of all (pars. 279–280).- 3. The impossibility of self-reference among mental sentences properly so called (pars. 281–336).- a. Introductory remarks (par. 281).- b. Conclusion 1: No mental sentence properly so called can signify itself to be false (pars. 282–301).- i. First proof (pars. 283–284).- ii. Second proof (pars. 285–286).- iii. Third proof (pars. 287–289).- ?. Refutation of other views, including Marsilius of Inghen’s (pars. 288–289).- iv. Fourth proof (pars. 290–296).- ?. Refutation of Marsilius’ view (pars. 292–296).- v. Corollaries (pars. 297–301).- ?. Corollary 1 (par. 297).- ?. Corollary 2 (pars. 298–299).- ?. Corollary 3 (par. 300).- ?. Corollary 4 (par. 301).- c. Conclusion 2: No mental sentence properly so called can signify itself to be true (pars. 302–306).- d. Conclusion 3: There are no self-referential mental sentences properly so called (pars. 307–310).- e. Objection to Conclusion 1 (pars. 311–326).- i. Statement of the objection (pars. 311–312).- ii. Supposition in mental sentences (pars. 313–326).- ?. Conclusion 1: A part of a mental sentence properly so called cannot supposit for the whole sentence (pars. 313–317).- ?. Conclusion 2: Or for the contradictory of that sentence (pars. 318–319).- ?. Conclusion 3 (pars. 320–321).- ?. Conclusion 4: No part of a conventionally signifying sentence can supposit for a corresponding mental sentence properly so called (pars. 322–323).- ?. Corollaries from Conclusions 1 through 4 (pars. 324–326).- Introductory remarks (par. 324).- Corollary 1: Reply to the objection in pars. 311–312 (par. 325).- Corollary 2 (par. 326).- f. Conclusion 4: Self-reference is possible in sentences signifying by convention, in any of the ways mentioned in pars. 253– 261 (pars. 327–336).- i. Corollary 1: Every insoluble is a spoken, written or mental sentence improperly so called (par. 329).- ii. Corollary 2: Parts of spoken, written or mental sentences improperly so called can supposit for their wholes (pars. 330–336).- ?. Objections to Corollary 2, with replies (pars. 332–336).- V. Chapter Four: Truth and falsehood of insolubles (pars. 337–383).- A. Introductory remarks (par. 337).- B. Assumption 1: Every insoluble has some corresponding mental sentence properly so called (pars. 338–339).- C. Assumption 2: The terms of an insoluble and a mental sentence properly so called corresponding to it signify and supposit for the the same (pars. 340–342).- D. Assumption 3: Howsoever an insoluble signifies the case to be, so does some mental sentence or sentences (pars. 343–344).- E. Assumption 4: Insolubles falsify themselves, and so are false (pars. 345–347).- F. Conclusion 1: Every insoluble corresponds to a true mental sentence (pars. 348–349).- G. Conclusion 2: Every insoluble corresponds to a false mental sentence (pars. 350–353).- H. Conclusion 3: Every insoluble corresponds to two unconjoined mental sentences, one true and one false (pars. 354–358).- 1. Corollary 1 (par. 357).- 2. Corollary 2 (par. 358).- I. Conclusion 4: Insolubles are true and false at the same time (pars. 359–383).- 1. Corollary 1: So are their contradictories (par. 361).- 2. Corollary 2 (par. 362).- 3. Corollary 3: Some apparent contradictories are not contradictory in fact (pars. 363–368).- a. The formation of contradictories (pars. 365–368).- 4. Corollary 4: No insoluble or its contradictory is absolutely true or absolutely false (par. 369).- 5. Objection involving some of the above points (pars. 370–376).- 6. Corollary 5: No insoluble is absolutely impossible (par. 377).- 7. Corollary 6: No insoluble or its contradictory should be absolutely conceded or absolutely denied (pars. 378–383).- Notes.

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