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The essays of this volume explore the conceptual relationships among intentionality, cognition and mental representation as conceived by some of the greatest medieval philosophers, including Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham and Buridan, and some of their lesser known, but in their own time equally influential contemporaries.
List of contents
Acknowledgments Intentionality, Cognition and Mental Representation in Medieval Philosophy Gyula Klima Concepts and Meaning in Medieval Philosophy Stephen Read Mental Language in Aquinas? Joshua P. Hochschild Causality and Cognition: An Interpretation of Henry of Ghent's Quodlibet V, q. 14 Martin Pickave Two Models of Thinking: Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus on Occurrent Thoughts Giorgio Pini Thinking About Things: Singular Thought in the Middle Ages Peter King Singular Terms and Vague Concepts in Late Medieval Mental Language Theory or the Decline and Fall of MentalLanguage Henrik Lagerlund Act, Species, and Appearance: Peter Auriol on Intellectual Cognition and Consciousness Russell L. Friedman Ockham's Externalism Claude Panaccio Was Adam Wodeham an internalist or an externalist? Elizabeth Karger The Nature of Intentional Objects in Nicholas of Autrecourt's Theory of Knowledge Christophe Grellard William Ockham and Walter Chatton on Objects and Acts of Judgment: or, How Chatton Changed Ockham's Mind Susan Brower-Toland 'Intentio' in Buridan John Zupko Mental Representation in Animals and Humans: Some Late-Medieval Discussions Olaf Pluta The Intersubjective Sameness of Mental Concepts in Late Scholastic Thought (and some Aspects of Its Historical Aftermath) Stephan Meier-Oeser Mental Representations and Concepts in Medieval Philosophy Gyula Klima Cumulative Bibliography List of Contributors Index
About the author
Gyula Klima is professor of philosophy at Fordham University, Doctor of the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences, director of the Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics, and
editor of the society's proceedings. Among his books is John Buridan (2008).
Summary
The essays of this volume explore the conceptual relationships among intentionality, cognition and mental representation as conceived by some of the greatest medieval philosophers, including Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham and Buridan, and some of their lesser known, but in their own time equally influential contemporaries.