International audienceThis article studies Buridan’s treatment of the paradoxes which arise from the use of verbs “signifying acts of the cognitive soul”. We can find his analyses mainly in the Sophismata (IXth treatise of Summulae logicales), and in the IVth treatise, dedicated to suppositions. However they can be put in relation with some aspects of the theory of the soul. John Buridan examines many sophisms created by these phenomena. Some of them permit to study simple acts of cognition, and especially the variations between singular and universal apprehension of a thing. Others concern complex acts of knowledge, when the cognitive verb governs propositions; they require logical analyses, especially comparisons between compound and di...
International audienceIn his Questions on the Soul John Buridan classifies possible stances concerni...
peer reviewedDans cet article, je suggère que la théorie reinachienne du jugement peut être vue comm...
Buridan holds that the proper subject of psychology (i.e., the science undertaken in Aristotle’s De ...
International audienceThis article studies Buridan’s treatment of the paradoxes which arise from the...
International audiencePresentation of some sophisms (puzzling sentences) by John Buridan (14th centu...
This paper examines Buridan's conception of scientia as opposed to error, opinio and fides. Since sc...
In this article the A. takes into account the particular relationship within contemporary cognitive ...
Jean Buridan was one of initiators of a new interpretation of Aristotle’s Categories. According to t...
What is reasoning, and how does it relate to logic? The antipsychological current dominated these re...
International audienceJohn Buridan wrote a commentary of the Physiognomy, still unedited and not ver...
The article discusses Tyler Burge’s views concerning the debate about the causal efficacy of mental ...
It is my contention that the table of intentionality (rationality, mind, thought, language, personal...
This book examines the theory of science according to John Buridan (ca. 1295-1358). This author play...
Physical causality psychological causality. In the present article, we study the relationships betwe...
peer reviewedCet article analyse l’un des concepts centraux de la philosophie intentionaliste contem...
International audienceIn his Questions on the Soul John Buridan classifies possible stances concerni...
peer reviewedDans cet article, je suggère que la théorie reinachienne du jugement peut être vue comm...
Buridan holds that the proper subject of psychology (i.e., the science undertaken in Aristotle’s De ...
International audienceThis article studies Buridan’s treatment of the paradoxes which arise from the...
International audiencePresentation of some sophisms (puzzling sentences) by John Buridan (14th centu...
This paper examines Buridan's conception of scientia as opposed to error, opinio and fides. Since sc...
In this article the A. takes into account the particular relationship within contemporary cognitive ...
Jean Buridan was one of initiators of a new interpretation of Aristotle’s Categories. According to t...
What is reasoning, and how does it relate to logic? The antipsychological current dominated these re...
International audienceJohn Buridan wrote a commentary of the Physiognomy, still unedited and not ver...
The article discusses Tyler Burge’s views concerning the debate about the causal efficacy of mental ...
It is my contention that the table of intentionality (rationality, mind, thought, language, personal...
This book examines the theory of science according to John Buridan (ca. 1295-1358). This author play...
Physical causality psychological causality. In the present article, we study the relationships betwe...
peer reviewedCet article analyse l’un des concepts centraux de la philosophie intentionaliste contem...
International audienceIn his Questions on the Soul John Buridan classifies possible stances concerni...
peer reviewedDans cet article, je suggère que la théorie reinachienne du jugement peut être vue comm...
Buridan holds that the proper subject of psychology (i.e., the science undertaken in Aristotle’s De ...