Logica Magna

Logica Magna

Author: Paolo (Veneto)

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 1978

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Treatise 10 concentrates on a general formulation of the conditions under which propositions are true or false respectively; and Treatise 11 deals primarily with the antilogical status of that which is signified by the whole proposition, and not just by one of its parts.


Logica Magna

Logica Magna

Author: George Edward Hughes

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 604

ISBN-13: 9780197260944

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In this fascicule Paul examines conditional propositions and inferences. Detailed notes make Paul's terminology and background ideas and assumptions more accessible to the modern reader, and an appendix contains substantial extracts from the writings of two fourteenth-century logicians, Ralph Strode and John Venator, both of whose works Paul makes extensive use of in this part of the Logica Magna.


Paul of Venice, 'Logica Magna'

Paul of Venice, 'Logica Magna'

Author: Stephen Read

Publisher:

Published: 2022-10-24

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9789042949409

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Paul of Venice joined the Austin Friars at an early age and was sent by them from Padua to study at Oxford in 1390. When he returned, full of ideas and laden with books, he began his prodigious writing career with several books on logic, including the Logica Magna, which runs to some half a million words. The current volume contains the final treatise, on insolubles - that is, logical paradoxes. After surveying fifteen previous solutions, Paul develops his own, based on the idea that such propositions falsify themselves. Besides a critical edition of the Latin text, the volume also contains an English translation, a detailed commentary, excerpts from two other logical works of Paul, and a substantial introduction. The introduction describes the fourteenth-century background to Paul's treatise; it also gives a detailed rebuttal of a recent claim that the Logica Magna is not by Paul because its content clashes with genuine works of his. All in all, the volume greatly enhances our understanding of the development of logic, in particular of the semantics of propositions, during a crucial century in its history.