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Full Description
William of Ockham's Summa Logicae (The Sum of Logic), composed in the mid-1320s, is a major work in the history of Western philosophy. It was highly influential for several centuries following its appearance. Ostensibly a textbook on logic, the work is an essential resource for understanding Ockham's philosophical project at large and contains numerous innovative ideas about thought, language, and ontology that are now attracting much interest in contemporary philosophy. Despite an abundant growth in Ockham scholarship in recent decades, this Critical Guide is the first collection of essays to be devoted to the Summa Logicae. The volume covers a wide range of topics, including nominalism, metalanguage, modes of signifying, Ockham's theory of the categorical syllogism, and modal logic. It provides both fresh perspectives on existing debates and new contributions on topics that have not yet entered mainstream scholarship on Ockham.
Contents
Introduction; 1. Metaphysical methodology in Ockham's Summa logicae I: against the semantics-first reading of Ockham's nominalism Susan Brower-Toland; 2. Ockham and syncategoremata Calvin G. Normore; 3. Ockham on metalanguage J. T. Paasch; 4. Ockham's moderate modism: modes of signifying in the summa logicae Milo Crimi; 5. Relations in Summa logicae Rondo Keele; 6. The threat of pernicious ambiguity - supposition and use in Ockham's mental speech Jon Borndholt and Sonja Schierbaum; 7. Ontology and Ockham's account of truth conditions for tensed propositions Nate Bulthuis; 8. Ockham's theory of the categorical syllogism Paul Thom; 9. Ockham's modal logic Lu Jiang; 10. Theory of demonstration: what is demonstrable in a contingent world? Joël Biard; 11. The obligationes of William of Ockham Sara L. Uckelman; 12. Ockham on the liar paradox Riccardo Strobino; 13. Ockham on figurative discourse Claude Panaccio; Bibliography; Index.