Robert Kilwardby, Notule libri Priorum, Part 1

Robert Kilwardby, Notule libri Priorum, Part 1

Robert Kilwardby, Notule libri Priorum, Part 1

Robert Kilwardby, Notule libri Priorum, Part 1

Hardcover(Bilingual)

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Overview

Robert Kilwardby (d.1279) was an English scholar who lectured on logic and grammar at the University of Paris in the 1230s. His lectures earned him widespread fame in Europe. Throughout the thirteenth century and up to the sixteenth, Kilwardby's lectures on Aristotle's Prior Analytics were considered to contain the authoritative exposition of Aristotle's syllogistic logic. They were published at Venice in 1499.

Written in the heady atmosphere of the early 1200s, when long-forgotten Aristotelian works were being rediscovered, Kilwardby's commentary is the work of a penetrating philosophical intellect intent not only on understanding Aristotle's logic but on pushing it to its limits. The present edition, in two volumes, contains the first critical edition of the lectures, together with an English translation. Part 1 contains an extensive introduction, placing Kilwardby's work within its historical context and demonstrating its importance both as an exposition of Aristotle's text and as an original contribution to philosophical logic. It also contains Lectures 1-38. Part 2 contains Lectures 39-77 and the comprehensive indexes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197265932
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/28/2016
Series: Auctores Britannici Medii Aevi
Edition description: Bilingual
Pages: 900
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 2.30(d)

About the Author

Paul Thom has published widely on the history of ancient and medieval Arabic and Latin logic. He has held teaching positions at the Universities of Sydney and Melbourne and at the Australian National University. He served for 10 years as Dean of Arts, first at the Australian National University, then at Southern Cross University. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.

John Scott began his work as a medievalist with an edition, translation and study of William of Malmesbury's History of Glastonbury. Subsequently he taught at University of Tasmania and Macquarie University.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTIONIntellectual background to the NotuleKilwardby's interpretation of the Prior Analytics and its doctrinesThe work's style and methodologyKilwardby's references to other authorsThe manuscriptsThe editionNote on the manuscripts of Boethius's translationOutline of the Prior Analytics, following Kilwardby's divisions of the textBibliographyAbbreviationsSiglaNOTULE LIBRI PRIORUMTabula lectionum 1-38Text, apparatus, and notes
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