학술논문

Essentialism, nominalism, and modality : the modal theories of Robert Kilwardby & John Buridan
Document Type
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
Source
Subject
160
Logic
Philosophy
Modality
Medieval logic
Buridan
Kilwardby
BC35.M63J7
Modality (Logic)
Logic
Medieval
Kilwardby
Robert
d. 1279
Buridan
John
Essentialism (Philosophy)
Nominalism
Language
English
Abstract
In the last 30 years there has been growing interest in and a greater appreciation of the unique contributions that medieval authors have made to the history of logic. In this thesis, we compare and contrast the modal logics of Robert Kilwardby and John Buridan and explore how their two conceptions of modality relate to and differ from modern notions of modal logic. We develop formal reconstructions of both authors' logics, making use of a number of different formal techniques. In the case of Robert Kilwardby we show that using his distinction between per se and per accidens modalities, he is able to provide a consistent interpretation of the apodictic fragment of Aristotle's modal syllogism and that, by generalising this distinction to hypothetical construction, he can develop an account of connexive logic. In the case of John Buridan we show that his modal logic is a natural extension of the usual Kripke-style possible worlds semantics, and that this modal logic can be shown to be sound and complete relative to a proof-theoretic formalisation of Buridan's treatment of the expository syllogism.

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