Demonstration and Scientific Knowledge in William of Ockham

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A01=John Lee Longeway
Albert the Great
Aristotelianism
Aristotle's Posterior Analytics
Author_John Lee Longeway
Category=PDA
Duns Scotus
Empiricism in the West
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Giles of Rome
John of Cornwall
knowledge of God
Latin Middle Ages
Medieval Theories of Demonstration
natural causation
Neoplatonism of Grosseteste
philosophy of science
Robert Grosseteste
scientific demonstration
theology
Thomas Aquinas

Product details

  • ISBN 9780268033781
  • Weight: 811g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jan 2007
  • Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book makes available for the first time an English translation of William Ockham's work on Aristotle's Posterior Analytics, which contains his theory of scientific demonstration and philosophy of science. John Lee Longeway also includes an extensive commentary and a detailed history of the intellectual background to Ockham's work in the Latin Middle Ages.

Longeway puts Ockham into context by providing a scholarly account of the reception and study of the Posterior Analytics in the Latin Middle Ages, with a detailed discussion of Robert Grosseteste, Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and Giles of Rome. In a series of appendices, Longeway includes shorter translations of some important related work by Giles of Rome and John of Cornwall.

In his introductory discussion, Longeway examines the exact character of the highest sort of demonstration (demonstratio potissima), the relations of the empirical sciences to mathematics, natural causation and the manner in which natural laws come to be known, the possibility of natural knowledge, our knowledge of God, and the relation of theology to the other sciences. Longeway discusses the way in which scientific epistemology and theory of demonstration corresponds to the metaphysical position of its interpreter, in particular to the Neoplatonism of Grosseteste, the radical Aristotelianism of Giles of Rome and Albert the Great, the more moderate Aristotelianism of Aquinas, and the nominalistic empiricism of Ockham. Throughout the book, Longeway makes a case for Ockham's importance as the founder of Empiricism in the West.

Demonstration and Scientific Knowledge in William of Ockham will interest philosophers and historians of science and logic, as well as those who study medieval philosophy or early modern philosophy.

John Lee Longeway is associate professor at University of Wisconsin, Parkside. He is the author of William Heytesbury: On Maxima and Minima.

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