This article studies some key moments in the long tradition of the critiqueof scholastic language, voiced by humanists and early-modern philosophers alike. It aims at showing how the humanist idiom of “linguistic usage,” “convention,” “custom,” “common” and “natural” language, and “everyday speech” was repeated and put to new use by early-modern philosophers in their own critique of scholastic language. Focusing on Valla, Vives, Sanches, Gassendi, Hobbes, and Leibniz, the article shows that all these thinkers shared a conviction that scholastic language, at least in its more baroque forms, was artificial, unnatural, uninformative, ungrammatical, and quasi-precise. The scholastics were accused of having introduced a terminology that was a fa...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...
The main intent of this study is to understand the perceptions and attitudes of translators who took...
Scholars have long seen the humanists' disdain for scholasticism as a distinguishing feature of Ital...
This article studies some key moments in the long tradition of the critiqueof scholastic language, v...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
Traditionally, scholasticism was considered as a medieval phenomenon only. The article argues that t...
This article explores the radical changes in the relationship between philosophy and the study of la...
Which language should philosophers use: technical or common language? In abook as important for inte...
This article contributes to the study of the relationship between Latin and Tuscan vernacular in the...
During the sixteenth century the disputes between Catholics and Protestants became the battleground...
The article aims to present a critical application of Richard Waswo’s notion of the “cosmetic” aspec...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Aristotle’s Topica provided a system of logical schemes (topoi) for constructing a consistent dialec...
Humanists across Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries focused intense scholarly att...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...
The main intent of this study is to understand the perceptions and attitudes of translators who took...
Scholars have long seen the humanists' disdain for scholasticism as a distinguishing feature of Ital...
This article studies some key moments in the long tradition of the critiqueof scholastic language, v...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
This chapter focuses on the views of Lorenzo Valla (c.1406-57), the Renaissance humanist, and in add...
Traditionally, scholasticism was considered as a medieval phenomenon only. The article argues that t...
This article explores the radical changes in the relationship between philosophy and the study of la...
Which language should philosophers use: technical or common language? In abook as important for inte...
This article contributes to the study of the relationship between Latin and Tuscan vernacular in the...
During the sixteenth century the disputes between Catholics and Protestants became the battleground...
The article aims to present a critical application of Richard Waswo’s notion of the “cosmetic” aspec...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Aristotle’s Topica provided a system of logical schemes (topoi) for constructing a consistent dialec...
Humanists across Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries focused intense scholarly att...
This article, which is the author’s trial lecture for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor, offers a br...
The main intent of this study is to understand the perceptions and attitudes of translators who took...
Scholars have long seen the humanists' disdain for scholasticism as a distinguishing feature of Ital...