Theory and History of Ontology

by Raul Corazzon (e-mail: rc@ontology.co)

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Buridan's Logic and Metaphysics: An Annotated Bibliography

INTRODUCTION

A bibliography of the works of Buridan published until the year 2000 is already available: Bibliographie spéciale sur Jean Buridan by Fabienne Pironet, pp. 2-4. (*)

I give an updated list of the published and unpublished logical and metaphysical works of Buridan, and a bibliography of the editions and translations appeared after 2000 or not cited in Pironet's bibliography.

A complete list of Buridan's works and manuscripts can be found in the 'Introduction' by Benoît Patar to his edition of "La Physique de Bruges de Buridan et le Traité du Ciel d'Albert de Saxe. Étude critique, textuelle et doctrinale" Vol. I, Longueil, Les Presses Philosophiques, 2001 (2 volumes), pp. 33* - 75*.

(*) N.B. The bibliography was originally posted on a personal page of Fabienne Pironet that is no more available; I publish the bibliography on my site for educational purpose.

The Quaestiones super octo libros Politicorum Aristotelis are not a work of Buridan, but of Nicolaus Girardi de Waudemonte (Nicholas of Vaudémont), a late Fourteenth-century French writer as demonstrated by Christoph Flüeler, Die Rezeption des Politica des Aristoteles an der Pariser Artistenfakultät im 13. und 14. Jahrhundert, in: Jürgen Miethke (ed.), Das Publikum politischer Theorie im 14. Jahrhundert, 1992, pp. 127-138.

SUMMARY LIST OF BURIDAN'S LATIN WORKS ON LOGIC AND METAPHYSICS

Logical Works:

N. B. The treatises known as Artes Veterem and commented by Buridan were the Isagoge by Porphyry and the Categoriae (Predicamenta) and the Peri Hermeneias by Aristotle.

  1. De propositionibus

  2. De praedicabilibus

  3. In praedicamenta

  4. De suppositionibus

  5. De syllogismis

  6. De locis dialecticis

  7. De sophisticis elenchis

  8. De demostrationibus

Metaphysical Works:

Polemical Woks:

DETAILED LIST WITH FULL BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES

Logical Works

  1. Expositio in Artem Veterem.
    Unpublished manuscript: Biblioteca de la Catedral de Tortosa (España) cod. 108 ff. 26r-74v.
  2. Quaestiones in Artem Veterem (de tertia lectura; ordinatio).
    This work is now available in critical edition (in three separated editions: see below).
  3. Quaestione Breves in Artes Veterem.
    Unpublished manuscripts available at the Libraries of Cracow, Leipzig, and Città del Vaticano (two manuscrpits)
  4. "Komentarz do Isagogi Porfiriusza [Quaestiones in Isagogen Porphyrii]," Przeglad Tomistyczny 2: 111-195 (1986).
    Quaestiones Super Artes Veterem I.
    Critical edition of the Latin text with an introduction in Polish by Ryszard Tatarzynski
  5. Quaestiones in Praedicamenta. München: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1983.
    Quaestiones Super Artes Veterem II.
    Edited by Johannes Schneider
  6. Quaestiones longe super Librum Perihermeneias. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1983.
    Quaestiones Super Artes Veterem III.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 4.
    Edited with an introduction by Ria van der Lecq
  7. Quaestio 3 Perihemeneias. In The Logic of John Buridan. Edited by Pinborg Jan. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press 1976. pp. 89-90
  8. Expositio in duos libros Analyticorum priorum Aristotelis.
    Unpublished manuscript of 1356: Praha, Knihovna Metropolitní Kapituly, cod. L.34, ff. 107r -136v.
  9. Quaestiones in duos libros Aristotelis Analyticorum priorum.
    Unpublished work available in manuscript at the Libraries of: Cracow, Leipzig, Liège, Münich, Prague, Vienne.
    Unpublished transcription by Hubert Hubien available at Peter King's Website.
  10. Quaestiones super libris Analyticorum priorum, quaestio XX: Utrum per inductionem probatur propositio immediata. In Historia philosophiae medii aevi. Vol. I. Edited by Mojsisch Burkhard and Pluta Olaf. Amsterdam: B. R. Grüner 1991. pp. 100-103
    Edited by Egbert P. Bos in Appendix (Anhang) to his essay: Pseudo-Johannes Duns Scotus über Induktion pp. 71-99
  11. Expositio in duos libros Analyticorum posteriorum Aristotelis.
    Unpublished manuscript: Città del Vaticano, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Urb. lat. 1489, f. 119ra - 150rb.
  12. Quaestiones in duos libros Aristotelis Analyticorum posteriorum. 2006.

    This work was attributed to Albert of Saxony and published in 1497 wit the title: Quaestiones subtilissimi Alberti de Saxonia super libros Posteriorum Milan, Venise (modern anastatic reprint: Hildesheim, Olms, 1986.
    Unpublished transcription by Hubert Hubien available at Peter King's Website.
  13. Expositio in Topica.
    The attribution of this work to Buridan is doubtful.
    Unpublished manuscript: Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, signature: Clm 12707, ff. 66ra - 99vb
  14. Quaestiones Topicorum. Turnhout: Brepols 2008.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by Niels Jorgen Green-Pedersen
  15. Quaestiones Elencorum. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1994.

    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 9.
    Edited with an introduction, notes and indices by Ria van der Lecq and H. A. G. Braakhuis
  16. Quaestiones super Sophisticos Elenchos [Index]. In The Logic of John Buridan. Edited by Pinborg Jan.1976. pp. 159-160
  17. Perutile compendium totius logicae Joannis Buridani cum praeclarissima solertissimi viri Joannis Dorp expositione.
    This work, also known as Summulae de dialectica or Lectura de summa logicae (the title of Hubert Hubien unpublished transcription) is composed by eight treatises: I. De propositionibus; II. De praedicabilibus; III. De praedicamentis; IV. De suppositionibus; V. De syllogismis; VI. De locis dialecticis; VII. De sophisticis elenchis; VIII. De demonstrationibus.
    A ninth treatise, Sophismata, is printed separately in the ancient editions.
    The first edition of the Summulae was edited by Thomas Bricot ( ? - 1516) at Paris in 1487.
    An anastatic reprint of the edition of Venice 1499, with the commentary by John Dorp (late 14th century) was published at Frankfurt am Main, Minerva, 1965.
    For critical editions of treatises I, II, III, IV, V, VIII and IX see below; treatises VI, and VII are not yet available in modern editions.
  18. Summulae: De propositionibus. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 2005.
    Summulae Vol. I.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-1.
    Introduction, critical edition, and indexes by Ria van der Lecq
  19. Summulae, Tractatus I. In The Logic of John Buridan. Edited by Pinborg Jan.1976. pp. 82-88
    Edition of: I.1.1; I.1.5; I.1.6; I.2.2; 1.3.2
  20. Summulae: De praedicabilibus. Edited by de Rijk Lambertus Marie. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1995.
    Summulae Vol. II.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-2.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by L. M. De Rijk.
    "The present edition contains the second tract [of Buridan's Summulae], De praedicabilibus, which deals with the five 'predicables', introduced by the Neoplatonist commentator of Aristotle, Porphyry (c. 233-c. 304 A.D.) in his introductory book (Isagoge) to the Stagirite's Categories, viz. 'genus', 'species', 'differentia', 'proprium', and 'accidens'. From as early as the eleventh century, medieval authors commented upon Boethius' (480-524) translation of, and commentary upon, this work.
    Buridan's discussion of the predicables is mainly based on the corresponding tract of Peter of Spain's manual. His comments are preceded by the complete text of the lemma from Peter to be discussed. It should be no surprise that Buridan's quotations should go back to an adapted version of Peter's text. (...)
    Buridan's work consists of elementary exegesis as well as extensive objections and dubitationes in which specific questions are dealt with, mostly in an original fashion." pp. XVII and XXI.
  21. Summulae: In praedicamenta. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1994.
    Summulae Vol. III.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-3.
    Introduction, critical edition and notes by Egbert P. Bos
  22. Summulae: De suppositionibus. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1998.
    Summulae Vol. IV.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-4.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by Ria Van der Lecq
  23. "Tractatus de suppositionibus," Rivista Critica di Storia della Filosofia 12 (1957).
    First part pp. 180-208; Second part pp. 323-352.
  24. Summulae: De syllogismis. Turnhout: Brepols 2010.
    Summulae Vol. V.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-5.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by Joke Spruyt
  25. Summulae: De locis dialecticis. Turnhout: Brepols 2011.
    Summulae Vol. VI.
    Not yet published
  26. The Summulae of John Buridan. Tractatus VI De locis. In The Logic of John Buridan. Edited by Pinborg Jan.1976. pp. 121-138
    Edited by Niels Jörgen Green-Pedersen
  27. Extracts from the Summulae. In The Logic of John Buridan. Edited by Pinborg Jan.1976. pp. 153-158
    Edited by Sten Ebbesen: 7.3.2; 7.3.4; 7.3.10 (de figura dictionis)
  28. Summulae: De fallaciis. Turnhout: Brepols 2011.
    Summulae Vol. VII.
    Not yet published
  29. Summulae: De demonstrationibus.Groningen-Haren: Ingenium Publishers 2001.
    Summulae Vol. VIII.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-8.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by L.M. de Rijk
  30. Summulae: De practica sophismatum. Turnhout: Brepols 2004.
    Summulae Vol. IX.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 10-9.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by Fabienne Pironet.
    "Treatise 9, De practica sophismatum, or Sophismata for short, has been edited once in full and once in part within the last few decades. The 1977 publication of the full text by Th.K. Scott contributed significantly to the scholarly community's awareness of the merits of Buridan's work, but the Latin text was only weakly anchored in the manuscript tradition; in fact it reproduced an incunabulum (our Z) emended by means of collation with usually one manuscript (our F). G.E. Hughes' partial edition of 1982 was based on six manuscripts (our A, E, F, I, 'I' and W) as well as on an incunabulum (our Z) and represented a considerable step forward on the road to a sound text. Our aim is to take one more step along on that road, by re editing the whole treatise on the basis of not only more but, we think, also better manuscripts." (p. XI, notes omitted)
  31. Sophisms on meaning and truth. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts 1966.
    Latin text and translation by Theodore Kermit Scott
  32. Sophismata. Stuttgart - Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog 1977.
    Critical edition with an introduction by Theodore Kermit Scott (now superseded by Pironet 2004)
  33. John Buridan on self-reference. Chapter Eight of Buridan's Sophismata. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1982.
    Latin text, translated, with an introduction and a philosophical commentary, by George E. Hughes.
  34. Tractatus De consequentiis. Louvain: Publications universitaires 1976.
    Critical edition by Hubert Hubien

Metaphysical Works

  1. Expositio in duodecim libros Metaphysicorum Aristotelis [first redaction].
    Unpublished manuscript (1340): Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, ms. latin 16 131, 124ra - 214vb
  2. Expositio in duodecim libros Metaphysicorum Aristotelis [second redaction].
    Unpublished manuscript (1392): Carpentras, Bibliothèque Inguimbertine, cod. 292 (L. 288), 1ra - 42va; other manuscripts at the Libraries of Darmstadt, München, Paris and Wien
  3. Lectura Erfordiensis in I-VI Metaphysicam, together with the 15th-century Abbreviatio caminensis. Turnhout: Brepols 2008.
    Introduction, critical edition and indexes by L. M. de Rijk.

    "The aim of the present edition is to make two texts available which can throw some more light on the role of Aristotle's Metaphysics in 14th-15th academic teaching. One of them contains part of an early (hitherto unknown) version of John Buridan's Questions on Metaphysics, the other is a 15th century abbreviation of precisely this early version. Remarkably, both texts belong to the East European tradition of Buridan's works, which is the more interesting as they testify to the master's earlier activities as a Parisian teacher on the subject of metaphysics. In particular, they elucidate Buridan's ongoing semantic approach to matters of metaphysics and ontology as well as his attitude to Aristotle's authority."
  4. Quaestiones in duodecim libros Metaphysicorum Aristotelis [first redaction].
    Unpublished manuscript: Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, ms. latin 16 131, 2ra - 122vb
  5. Quaestiones in duodecim libros Metaphysicorum Aristotelis [secundum ultimam Lecturam].
    Manuscript: Carpentrat, Bibliothèque Inguimbertine, cod. 292, 45ra - 118rb.
    Other manuscript at the Libraries of Erfurt (two copies), Paris (two copies), Venezia and Wien.
    Printed edition: In Metaphysicen Aristotelis questiones, Paris, Josse Bede, 1518.
    Facsimile reproduction of this edition under the title Kommentar zur Aristotelischen Metaphysik (the date 1588 printed in the frontispice is an error), Frankfurt am Main, Minerva, 1965.
  6. Quaestiones breves in duodecim libros Metaphysicorum Aristotelis.
    Unpublished manuscript: Biblioteka Narodowa (Poland), cod. 5835, 194 - 216

Polemical Woks

  1. "John Buridan's Treatise, De dependentiis, diversitatibus, et convenientiis. An edition," Vivarium 42: 115-149 (2004).
    Edited by Dirk-Jan Dekker
  2. "Tractatus de differentia universalis ad individuum," Przeglad Tomistyczny 3: 137-178 (1987).
    Also known with the title: Duae Quaestiones (Tractatus) De Universali.
    Critical edition of the Latin text by Slawomir Szyller
  3. John Buridan's Tractatus de Infinito: Quaestiones super libros Physicorum secundum ultimam lecturam, Liber III, Questiones 14-19. An Edition with Introduction and Indexes. Nijmegen: Ingenium Publishers 1991.
    Artistarium Supplementa Vol. 6.
    Edited by Johannes M. M. H. Thijssen.

TRANSLATIONS OF THE LOGICAL AND METAPHYSICAL WORKS OF BURIDAN

ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS

  1. Summulae de Dialectica. New Haven: Yale University Press 2001.
    An annotated translation, with a philosophical introduction by Gyula Klima.
  2. Jean Buridan's logic. The Treatise on Supposition. The Treatise on Consequences. Dordrecht: Reidel 1985.
    Translated, with a philosophical introduction by Peter King.
  3. Sophisms on meaning and truth. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts 1966.
    Latin text and translation by Theodore Kermit Scott
  4. John Buridan on self-reference. Chapter Eight of Buridan's Sophismata. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1982.
    Latin text, translated, with an introduction and a philosophical commentary, by George E. Hughes.
    Reprinted, without the Latin text, with the title: Chapter Eight of Buridan's 'Sophismata', Cambridge University Press, 1982.
  5. Sophismata, Chapter VIII, "Insolubles". In Readings in Medieval philosophy. Edited by Schoedinger Andrew B. New York: Oxford University Press 1996. pp. 707-733
  6. John Buridan on the Predicables. In Medieval Philosophy. Essential readings with commentary. Edited by Klima Gyula, Allhoff Fritz, and Vaidya Anand Jayprakash. Malden: Blackwell 2008. pp. 79-82
    Reprinted from Summulae de Dialectica, translated by G. Klima, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001, pp. 103-107.
  7. John Buridan on Scientific Knowledge. In Medieval philosophy. Essential readings with commentary. Edited by Klima Gyula, Allhoff Fritz, and Vaidya Anand Jayprakash. Malden: Blackwell 2008. pp.
    First text: Whether It Is Possible to Comprehend the Truth about Things, pp. 143-147 from Quaestiones in Aristotelis Metaphysicam: Kommentar zur Aristotelischen Metaphysik (Paris: 1518; Frankfurt am Main: Minerva, 1964 reprint) book 2, quaestio 1 (translation by G. Klima).
    Second text: The Differences between Knowledge and Opinion, pp. 147-150 from Summulae de Dialectica, translated by. G. Klima, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001, pp. 706-711.
  8. Questions on Aristotle's Metaphysics, Book IV, questions 8 and 9. In Philosophy in the Middle Ages. The Christian, Islamic and Jewish Traditions. Edited by Hyman Arthur and Walsh James Jerome. Indianapolis: Hackett 1973. pp. 711-716
    Translated by J. J. Walsh.
  9. Latin philosophy in the Fourteenth century. John Buridan. In Philosophy in the Middle Ages. The Christian, Islamic and Jewish Traditions. Edited by Hyman Arthur and Walsh James Jerome. Indianapolis: Hackett 1983. pp. 751-775
    Questions on Aristotle's Metaphysics: Book II, Question I, pp. 751-754; Questions on Aristotle's Metaphysics: Book IV Question 8 and 9 pp. 760-765.
  10. Economos Ariane, "Intellectus and induction: Three Aristotelian commentators on the cognition of first principles, including an original translation of John Buridan's "Quaestiones in duos Aristotelis libros posteriorum analyticorum" ", 2009.
    Unpublished Ph.D thesis, available at ProQuest Dissertations & Theses ref. AAT 3377044.
    Abstract: "Recent scholars have argued that the skeptical problem of induction was unknown until the 18 th century. They claim that a theory of knowledge such as the one embraced by medieval Aristotelians, which holds that an effect may be demonstratively proven to follow from its cause, must also hold that a necessary connection exists between a cause and its effect. What such scholars overlook is that medieval philosophers also argue that to claim that all knowledge of causal connections must be obtained demonstratively would lead to an infinite regress; the premises from which a demonstration proceeds cannot always themselves be demonstrated if a regress is to be avoided. Thus, medieval philosophers identify some indemonstrable premises which are causal in nature. They take propositions like, "scammony causes the purging of bile," and, "a certain herb results in the reduction of fever," to be indemonstrable principles which may serve as the starting-points of demonstrations. Principles such as these, medieval Aristotelians claim, are known through induction. Thus, to truly understand whether or not a medieval "skeptical problem" could pre-date that of Hume, what we must examine is the medieval account of the acquisition of indemonstrable first principles.
    An examination of such principles and an analysis of the medieval claim that they are acquired through induction is the theme of this dissertation. Over the course of the dissertation, I defend three theses. First, I argue that when medieval philosophers interpret Aristotle's claim that first principles are obtained through induction, they adapt this claim so as to apply to a kind of principle which we do not find in Aristotle, namely, a principle stating a causal connection. Second, I argue that three medieval commentators on Aristotle--Robert Grosseteste, Thomas Aquinas, and John Buridan--each interpret the role which induction plays in the acquisition of these principles in such diverse ways that we ought not look for one overarching "medieval view" of induction. Third and finally, I argue that Buridan's unique approach to induction and its relation to intellectus (the Latin equivalent of nous ) is fueled almost entirely by his sensitivity to skeptical concerns."

FRENCH TRANSLATIONS

  1. Questions sur l'Art Ancien. (Isagoge, Traité des Catégories, Traité de l'Interprétation). Longueil (Canada): Presses philosophiques 2009.
    Traduction et étude critique de Benoît Patar.
  2. Le Traité des conséquences, suivi du Traité sur les propositions. Longueil (Canada): Presses philosophiques 2002.
    Traduction et commentaire par Benoît Patar, suivie d'une traduction de l'Introduction au Commentaire des Petites Sommes de Pierre d'Espagne.
  3. Sophismes. Paris: Vrin 1993.
    Texte traduit, introduit et annoté par Joël Biard.

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF STUDIES ON THE LIFE AND THE MANUSCRIPTS OF BURIDAN

  1. Bernd Michael. Johannes Buridan: Studien zu seinem Leben, seinen Werken und zur Rezeption seiner Theorien im Europas des Späten Mittelalters. Berlin: 1985.
    Unpublished dissertation in two volumes.
    Vol. I. Der Author, seine Werke, Sein Publikum; Vol. II. Johannes Buridan: Bibliographie, Überlieferung und Quellenkritik seiner Werke.
  2. Faral Edmond, "Jean Buridan. Notes sur les manuscrits, les éditions et le contenu de ses ouvrages," Archives d'Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 15: 1-53 (1946).
  3. Faral Edmond, "Jean Buridan: Maître és arts de l'Université de Paris," Histoire Littéraire de la France 28 (1949). pp. 462-605.
    (Also published in a separated edition in 1950).
  4. Federici Vescovini Graziella. A propos de la diffusion des oeuvres de Jean Buridan en Italie du XIVe au XVIe siècle. In The Logic of John Buridan. Acts of the Third European Symposium on Medieval Logic and Semantics. Edited by Pinborg Jan. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum 1976. pp. 21-45
  5. Flüeler Christoph, "Two Manuscripts of Buridan on the Metaphysics: Paris, BN, lat. 16131 and Darmstadt, Hessische La&HB, Hs 516," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen Âge Grec et Latin 67: 78-92 (1997).
  6. Lohr Charles H., "Medieval Aristotle Commentaries. Authors: Jacobus-Johannes Juff," Traditio 26: 135-216 (1970).
    On Buridan see pp. 161-183.
  7. Markowski Mieczyslaw, "Le Commentum in duos libros Analyticorum Posteriorum de Jean Buridan," Archives d'Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 32: 251-255 (1965).
  8. Markowski Mieczyslaw, "Jean Buridan est-il l'auteur des quaestiones sur les Seconds analytiques?," Mediaevalia Philosophica Polonorum 12: 16-30 (1966).
  9. Markowski Mieczyslaw. Burydanizm w Polsce w Okresie Przedkopernikanskim. Studium z Historii Filozofii i Nauk Scislych na Uniwersytecie Krakowskim w XV Wieku. Wroclaw : Wydawnictwo Polskiej Akademii Nauk 1971.
    Buridanism in Poland in the Pre-Copernican Period. Study of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cracow in the Fifteenth Century.
    This book, written in Polish with an English summary, is cited in the bibliography of Fabeinne Pironet with the French title: Buridanisme en Pologne avant Copernic. (Studia Copernicana, II).
  10. Markowski Mieczyslaw. Johannes Buridans Kommentar zu Aristotles' Organon in Mitteleuropas Bibliotheken. In The Logic of John Buridan. Acts of the Third European Symposium on Medieval Logic and Semantics. Edited by Pinborg Jan. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum 1976. pp. 9-20
  11. Markowski Mieczyslaw. Buridanica quae in codicibus manus criptis bibliothecarum Monacensium asservantur ex descriptionibus a se confectis. Wroclaw: Polska Akademia nauk. Instytut flozofii socjologii 1981.
  12. Markowski Mieczyslaw, "Buridans Metaphysikkommentare in ihren handschriftlichen Überlieferungen in den Bibliotheken in Darmstadt, Erfurt, München und Wien," Mediaevalia Philosophica Polonorum 27: 73-88 (1984).
  13. Markowski Mieczyslaw. L'influence de Jean Buridan sur les universités d'Europe centrale. In Preuve et raisons à l'Université de Paris. Logique, ontologie et théologie au XIVe siècle. Edited by Kaluza Zénon and Vignaux Paul. Paris: Vrin 1984. pp. 149-163
  14. Markowski Mieczyslaw. Der Buridanismus an der Krakauer Universität im Mittelalter. In Historia Philosophiae Medii Aevi. Studien zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters. Festschrift für Kurt Flasch zu seinem 60. Geburtstag. (vol. I). Edited by Mojsisch Burkhard and Pluta Olaf. Amsterdam: Grüner 1988. pp. 245-260
  15. Le traité de l'âme de Jean Buridan. Leuven: Peeters Publishers 1991.
    Édition, étude critique et doctrinale de Benoît Patar.
    Voir pp. 31* - 112*.
  16. Ioannis Buridani. Expositio et quaestiones in Aristotelis De caelo. Leuven: Peeters Publishers 1996.
    Édition, étude critique et doctrinale de Benoît Patar.
    Voir pp. 42* - 133*.
  17. La Physique de Bruges de Buridan et le Traité du Ciel d'Albert de Saxe. Longueil: Les Presses Philosophiques 2001.
    Étude critique, textuelle et doctrinale de Benoît Patar.
    Deux volumes.) Dans le premier volume, aux pages 33* - 75* on trouve la liste complète des oeuvres authentiques de Buridan.

 

RELATED PAGES

From the Section: "History of Logic in Relationship to Ontology"

EXTERNAL LINKS

Buridanica - Internet Resources for the Study of Jean Buridan

RELATED SITES

Three sites (currently under development) which will be devoted to studies on Ontology in Italian, French and German:

Teoria e Storia dell'Ontologia

Théorie et Histoire de l'Ontologie

Theorie und Geschichte der Ontologie

Index of the PDF version of the pages and of the Essays in PDF format

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