Results for ' exponibilia '

6 found
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  1. Syncategoremata, exponibilia, sophismata.Norman Kretzmann - 1982 - In Norman Kretzmann, Anthony Kenny & Jan Pinborg (eds.), Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 211--245.
  2.  67
    The doctrine of exponibilia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.E. J. Ashworth - 1973 - Vivarium 11 (1):137-167.
  3. The Doctrine of Exponibilia in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. E. Ashworth - 1973 - Vivarium 11 (1):137-167.
  4. Syncategoremata, sophismata, exponibilia.Norman Kretzmann - 1982 - In Norman Kretzmann, Anthony Kenny & Jan Pinborg (eds.), Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 211--241.
  5.  66
    The Hermeneutical Rehabilitation of Supposition Theory in Seventeenth-Century Protestant Logic.Stephan Meier-Oeser - 2013 - Vivarium 51 (1-4):464-481.
    The paper focuses on some aspects of the early modern aftermath of supposition theory within the framework of the protestant logical tradition. Due to the growing influence of Humanism, supposition theory from the third decade of the sixteenth century was the object of general neglect and contempt. While in the late sixteenth-century a number of standard textbooks of post-Tridentine scholastic logic reintegrated this doctrine, although in a bowdlerized version, it remained for a century out of the scope of Protestant logic. (...)
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    Studies in post-medieval semantics.Earline Jennifer Ashworth - 1985 - London: Variorum Reprints.
    "For riding is required a horse"--"I promise you a horse"--Chimeras and imaginary objects--Theories of the proposition--The structure of mental language--Mental language and the unity of propositions--"Do words signify ideas or things?"--Locke on language--The doctrine of exponibilia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries--Multiple quantification and the use of special quantifiers in early sixteenth century logic--Thomas Bricot(d. 1516) and the Liar paradox--Will Socrates cross the bridge?
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