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John of Salisbury on Aristotelian science

John of Salisbury on Aristotelian science

David Bloch

About this book

This is the first substantial treatment of John of Salisbury's views on Aristotelian science. In his great work on logic and education, John of Salisbury proposes an Aristotelian foundation for education, research, and science. Theories and methods of science and scholarship were central topics in twelfth-century discourse, and John is apparently the first to propose use of the entire Organon, the texts of which were to become very influential and important in the thirteenth century. However, his precise knowledge and understanding of Aristotle has never been thoroughly examined. The present book challenges the view that John read, understood, and used the entire Organon. It pays particular attention to the Metalogicon, but it draws upon a variety of other sources as well in arguing that John did not in fact study the Ars nova with any care, and that he probably never read the most important text, the Posterior Analytics, in its entirety.

Details

OL Work ID
OL32993729W

Subjects

KnowledgeContributions in logicScienceInfluenceMedieval LogicLogicEarly works to 1800

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.