Knowledge, Mental Language, and Free Will traverses the medieval philosophical landscape of metaphysics, logic and natural philosophy. Alexander W. Hall discusses Thomas Aquinas’s interpretation of Aristotle’s doctrine of per se predication as it occurs in the conclusion of scientific demonstrations, i.e., of arguments producing scientific knowledge in the strict sense. Henrik Lagerlund and Catarina Dutilh Novaes take up medieval studies of mental language in the writings of Peter of Ailly and William Ockham. Works in this genre seek to discern what concepts are concepts of, the ontological status of concepts as entities, and how concepts stand for and represent things in the world. Lastly, Walter Redmond comments on and translates the prologue to and first chapter of the Mexican Jesuit Father Matias Blanco’s (d. 1734) The Three-Stranded Cord [Funiculus triplex], where Blanco treats the antinomy between freedom and determination, modal semantics, tense logic and the logical status of counterfactuals in an attempt to reconcile human freedom with God’s causality and omniscience.
Gyula Klima
Knowledge, Mental Language, and Free Will (Volume 3 [PDF ebook]
Proceedings of the Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics)
Knowledge, Mental Language, and Free Will (Volume 3 [PDF ebook]
Proceedings of the Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics)
Koop dit e-boek en ontvang er nog 1 GRATIS!
Formaat PDF ● Pagina’s 115 ● ISBN 9781443834094 ● Editor Gyula Klima ● Uitgeverij Cambridge Scholars Publishing ● Gepubliceerd 2011 ● Downloadbare 6 keer ● Valuta EUR ● ID 2609923 ● Kopieerbeveiliging Adobe DRM
Vereist een DRM-compatibele e-boeklezer