Medieval logic
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Publication:4604253
zbMATH Open1475.03004MaRDI QIDQ4604253FDOQ4604253
Authors: Sara L. Uckelman
Publication date: 23 February 2018
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Philosophical and critical aspects of logic and foundations (03A05) History of mathematical logic and foundations (03-03) History of mathematics in Late Antiquity and medieval Europe (01A35)
Cited In (20)
- John Buridan's theory of consequence and his octagons of opposition
- A Comparative Taxonomy of Medieval and Modern Approaches to Liar Sentences
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- What Hamblin's formal dialectic tells about the medieval logical disputation
- Three 13th-century views of quantified modal logic
- Boethius of Dacia (1270s) and Radulphus Brito (1290s) on the universal sign `every'
- When the world is not enough: medieval ways to deal with the lack of referents
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- Formalizing medieval logical theories. Suppositio, consequentiae and obligationes
- Abstractiones. Edited by Sten Ebbesen, Mary Sirridge and E. Jennifer Ashworth
- Interactive logic in the middle ages
- Modern views of medieval logic
- ‘Everything True Will Be False’: Paul of Venice and a Medieval Yablo Paradox
- Mediaeval and Renaissance logic
- The logic of categorematic and syncategorematic infinity
- The medieval theory of consequence
- Theories of paradox in the Middle Ages
- Forgotten and neglected solutions of problems in philosophical logic
- Multiple quantification and the use of special quantifiers in early sixteenth century logic
- Title not available (Why is that?)
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