Juan Luis Vives against the pseudodialecticians : a humanist attack on medieval logic : The attack on the pseudialecticians and On dialectic, book III, v, vi, vii, from The causes of the corruption of the arts, with an appendix or related passages by Thomas More : the texts /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Vives, Juan Luis, 1492-1540
Uniform title:Adversus pseudodialecticos. English & Latin
Imprint:Dordrecht ; Boston : D. Reidel Pub. Co., c1979.
Description:xiii, 235 p. : port. ; 23 cm.
Language:English
Latin
Series:Synthese historical library v. 18
Synthese historical library v. 18
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/342713
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Other title:Against the pseudodialecticians.
Other uniform titles:More, Thomas, Saint, 1478-1535
Guerlac, Rita
Vives, Juan Luis, 1492-1540. De causis corruptarum artium. De dialectica. English & Latin. 1978. Book 3. Pts. 5-7.
Lax, Gaspar, 1487-1560
ISBN:9027709009
Notes:Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 221-227.
Description
Summary:The humanist treatises presented here are only peripheral to the history of logic, but I think historians of logic may read them with interest, if perhaps with irritation. In the early sixteenth century the humanists set about to demolish medieval logic based on syllogistic and disputation, and to replace it in the university curriculum with a 'rhetorical' logic based on the use of topics and persuasion. To a very large extent they succeeded. Although ArisĀ­ totelian logic retained a vigorous life in the schools, it never again attained to the overwhelming primacy it had so long enjoyed in the northern universities. It has been the custom to take the arguments of the humanists at face value, and the word 'scholastic' has continued to have pejorative overtones. This is easy to understand, because until recently our knowledge of the high period of medieval logic has been slight, and the humanists' testimony as to its decadent state in the sixteenth century has, for the most part, been accepted uncritically. Within the past two decades important work on medieval logic has recovered the brilliant achievement of thirteenth and fourteenth century logicians, philosophers, and natural scientists. New studies are constantly appearing, and the logico-semantic system of the terminists has become fruitful territory not only for historians of logic but also for students of modern linguistics and semiotics.
Item Description:Includes index.
Physical Description:xiii, 235 p. : port. ; 23 cm.
Bibliography:Bibliography: p. 221-227.
ISBN:9027709009