School of Athens

Theory and History of Ontology

by Raul Corazzon - e-mail: raul.corazzon[at]formalontology.it

For an overview see the Index of the Pages, the SITE MAP or the Alphabetical Index of the Philosophers: A-F - G-O - P-Z; You can also download this page as Ontology in PDF format

Table of Contemporary Ontologists Ontology. Table of Ontologists (click on the image to see the PDF file)

Latin Medieval Commentators on Aristotle's Categories

 

Index of the Section: "History of the Theories of Categories"

 

INTRODUCTION: THE PLACE OF LOGIC IN LATE ANTIQUITY

"The centuries between Aristotle and Porphyry bequeathed few logical works to the early Middle Ages. Cicero wrote a Topics, professedly based on Aristotle's work on the subject, but probably derived from a later source. The book was quite widely read in the Middle Ages, at the time when Aristotle's Topics was unknown. A work attributed to Apuleius, and bearing the same Greek title (transliterated) as the De InterpretationePeri hermeneias – enjoyed a certain vogue among the earliest medieval logicians. For modern scholars, it is a useful source of Stoic logical theories; but its philosophical content is slight.

By the time of Porphyry, however, a development had taken place in the status, rather than the doctrine, of Aristotelian logic, which would be of great importance for medieval philosophy. Aristotelian logic had been adopted by the Neoplatonists and given a definite place in their programme of teaching. Whereas their use of Aristotle's philosophical works was piecemeal and distorting, his logic was studied faithfully as a whole. Aristotle had rejected the notion of Platonic Ideas; and he had consequently treated genera and species in his logic purely as class-designations for individual things. The Neoplatonists assimilated this approach, which contradicted the very basis of their metaphysics, by limiting the application of Aristotelian logic to the world of concrete things. Stripped of its metaphysical relevance, the tendency was for logic to become more purely formal than it had been for Aristotle. However, the extra-logical aspects of the Categories and the De interpretatione were too intrinsic to these works to be ignored; and the result was the growth of a body of philosophical discussion and commentary within the Neoplatonic logical tradition, only vaguely related to Neoplatonic metaphysics, and sometimes seemingly antithetical to its principles.

Porphyry himself did more than anyone to establish Aristotelian logic within the Platonic schools. He commented the Categories and the De interpretatione and wrote a short Isagoge (Introduction') to logic, which quickly became established as a prologue to the Aristotelian corpus. The Isagoge is devoted to explaining five concepts which play an important part in the Categories: genus, species, difference, property and accident. It illustrates well Porphyry's formal approach to logic; and he avoids a philosophical discussion of the nature of genera and species, listing various opinions, but refusing to discuss them further in a work which is designed as an introduction.

The language of philosophy in the Roman Empire was Greek. The few philosophers who wrote in Latin were of vital importance in transmitting the logical tradition to the Middle Ages, even -perhaps especially - where their activity was limited to translation and paraphrasing. From the circle of Themistius (c. 317-88) derives a Latin epitome of the Categories, known as the Categoriae Decem, much read in the ninth and tenth centuries. This work adds some further remarks, on quantity, space and the relationship between ousia and the other categories, to a summary of Aristotle's text. The author begins by treating Aristotle's text as a discussion of speech (133:1-8) - a term he believes should principally apply to nouns and verbs which, unlike other words, designate things (133:11-15). He searches for a word which will include (that is, presumably, designate) all things, and arrives (134:16-20) at the conclusion that this word is ousia 'one of the ten categories'. This seems a fair enough conclusion from Aristotle's theory, since every thing is an ousia and can therefore be signified by the word ousia. But, a little later (145:25-146:2), the author produces a similar definition, but one which this time applies not to the word 'ousia', but the concept designated by it: 'ousia has no genus because it sustains everything'. The suggestion here is that ousia refers, not to the individual thing as in the Categories (although this definition is also given by the paraphraser), but to that which every individual has in common by virtue of being something at all. The implication may well not have been intended by the epitomist who, in general, tries to give a faithful impression of Aristotle's text; oversight or not, it proved influential.

Marius Victorinus seems to have been a prolific translator of philosophical and logical works into Latin. Augustine used his versions of the Platonists' books' (probably parts of Plotinus and Porphyry); Boethius - whose opinion of him was low - used his adaptation of Porphyry's Isagoge in his first commentary on it (see below, pp. 30-1); and there is evidence that he wrote a commentary on Cicero's Topics. But the only part of his logical work which reached the Middle Ages intact was a brief treatise De diffinitione, an aid to studying the Topics.

In the Middle Ages, the Categoriae Decem was attributed, wrongly, to Augustine. But Augustine's authentic comments about the Categories, as well as the misattributed work, made him an authority for the earliest medieval logicians. In the Confessions (iv.xvi.28), Augustine describes his first contact with Aristotle's treatise, which he found himself capable of understanding without the aid of his teacher. When he came to write his De trinitate, he included a discussion (v. ii. 3) of a type frequent among the Neoplatonists, about the Categories and their inapplicability to God. But he stated that ousia could be applied to God: indeed, that it was God to whom it most properly applied. This idea, fully consistent with Augustine's ontology (see above, pp.15-16), was to influence ninth-century interpretations of the Categories. A short treatise, De dialectica, was also attributed to Augustine in the Middle Ages; and most scholars now accept its authenticity. The work is remarkable for its linguistic approach to dialectic. Having separated words into single and combined (I) - as Aristotle distinguishes at the beginning of the Categories between things said with and without combination - Augustine devotes most of his energies to discussing single words, how they gain their meaning and how 26 The antique heritage ambiguity is possible. Dialectic includes, says Augustine (iv), the discussion of the truth or falsity of sentences and conjunctions of sentences; but the treatise does not go on to consider this topic."

 

From: John Marenbon -Early medieval philosophy (480-1150). An introduction - London, , Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983, pp. 23-26.

 

 

NOTE ABOUT THE GENERAL HISTORY OF THE COMMENTARY GENRE

"It is generally assumed that Homer was the first author to be subjected to commenting, and I see no reason to dispute this most reasonable assumption. It is scarcely imaginable that anything meriting the name of commentary was composed before 400 BC, but by 300 BC the literary commentary must have been around for some time, and the philosophical commentary appears. The first one evidenced was by Crantor and dealt with Plato's Timaeus (2).

We have to wait almost half a millennium to find a fully preserved philosophical commentary. Indeed, the second- to third-century Aristotelian commentaries of Aspasius and Alexander of Aphrodisias are among the oldest commentaries on any text that we have got and among all preserved commentaries from Antiquity those on Aristotle or Plato are massively represented -- the two philosophers are in the heavyweight league together with the Bible and Hippocrates. The bulk of the preserved commentaries are from the fifth or the sixth century, with a special concentration of Aristotle commentaries in the sixth century. Most of them are in Greek, the most notable exception being Boethius' works, which belong in the sixth-century group.

The sixth century, then, was to have a very strong influence on the medieval approach to philosophical texts, whether in the East, where people read Aristotle with Ammonius, Simplicius and Philoponus at their elbow; or in the West, where Boethius alone made an impact as strong as that made by his three Greek colleagues together in the East. In the formative period of Western scholasticism in the twelfth century, commentators imitated the format and the formulae of Boethius' Aristotle commentaries, and even commentaries on Plato's Timaeus use a Boethian format rather than that used by Calcidius in his exposition of Plato's work. (3)

Teachers, whether ancient or medieval, Greek or Latin, would give their pupils a few hints about the general contents of the relevant text in their introductory lectures, which appear as proems in the written versions of commentaries. But much more important than those lectures were the compendia, the sort of books that since Antiquity have often carried the title of Introduction to... whatever the subject (Eisagogé, Introductiones...). Most of the extant ancient specimens, insofar as they are philosophical, are about logic. In principle, and sometimes in practice, such works can be independent of any particular authoritative text. Thus there is no reason to see Galen's Introduction to Logic as a sort of summary of one or two of the classics of logic. On the other hand, Boethius' Introduction to Categorical Syllogisms4 makes no secret of the fact that it tries to summarize the syllogistics presented in Aristotle's Prior Analytics, and for good measure, it starts with a summary of the doctrine of terms and propositions from the Perihermeneias. Basically the same matter is covered in Apuleius' Perihermeneias.

Boethius used a work by Porphyry for his models. We cannot tell for certain how closely he followed his model, but at least the general structure is likely to have been the same in Porphyry. If so, Porphyry's Introduction to the Categories (the Isagoge) and his Introduction to categorical syllogisms together offered a compendium of a very large part of the Organon.

A brief compendium of logic may also be found in Martianus Capella and an ultra-brief one in Cassiodorus. Together with Boethius they gave inspiration to the revitalizing of the compendium genre in medieval Latin scholasticism, with Peter of Spain's Summulae as the most famous specimen. The genre also survived in Byzantium, but only barely so — only three reasonably complete ones are extant, dating from 1007, ca. 1260, and ca. 1325, respectively ; there is convincing evidence that not a lot more ever existed'. The typical Latin compendium or summulae is characterized by combining sections that summarize certain parts of the Organon with sections that deal with more recent parts of logic. This is not the case with the Byzantine compendia7.

Most often people would read a compendium before they read the original texts. In that way the compendia could be very influential by preconditioning students for a certain way of reading the authoritative texts." pp. 1-3

 

(2) Referred to by Plutarch in De animae procreatione in Timaeo, and by Proclus in his In Timaeum. The sources do not allow us to decide whether his work was some sort of essay on the Timaeus or more like a series of explanatory notes on the text.

(3) Thus in the anonymous scholia on Timaeus published as Bernhard of Chartres, Glosae super Platonem. Edited by P.E. Dutton, Studies and Texts 107, PIMS, 1991.

(4) I use this title for the work of which the first version appears as De syllogismo categorico in Migne's Patrologia Latina 64, whereas the incomplete revised version appears as Introductio ad syllogismos categoricos. Christina Thomsen Thornqvist of the university of Gothenburg will discuss the title question in her forthcoming critical edition of the first version. [Anicii Manlii Severini Boethii De syllogismo categorico. Gothenburg: University of Gothenburg 2008.]

(5) See Patrologia Latina 64 : 813C " ipse Porphyrius ", and cf. 814C " Hos ergo quatuor in prima figura modos in Analytics suis Aristoteles posuit. Caeteros vero quinque modos Theophrastus et Eudemus addiderunt, quibus Porphyrius, gravissimae vir auctoritatis, virus est consensisse ".

(6) See S. Ebbesen, “Western and Byzantine Approaches to Logic”, in Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen Age Grec et Latin, 62 (1992), pp. 167-178, at p. 172.

(7) Already in ancient times hypothetical syllogisms had been added to the Organon material, but then hypothetical syllogisms had also found their way into the commentaries on Prior Analytics.

 

From: Sten Ebbesen Ebbesen - Late-ancient ancestors of medieval philosophical Commentaries. In Il Commento filosofico nell'Occidente latino (secoli XIII/XV) / The philosophical commentary in the Latin West (13 - 15th centuries). Edited by Fioravanti Gianfranco, Leonardi Claudio, and Perfetti Stefano. Turnhout: Brepols 2002. pp. 1-15
Reprinted as Chapter 7 in: S. Ebbesen - Greek-Latin philosophical interaction. Collected essays of Sten Ebbesen. Volume 1 - Aldershot, Ashgate, 2008, pp. 97-106.

 

 

PROBLEMS IN ARISTOTLE'S CATEGORIES

"Among the main problems of Aristotle's theory of the categories are the nature of their members, their number and how this number is arrived at. We find these problems discussed in modern research (1), but they are also dealt with in medieval philosophy.

To have a better understanding of the theories of the categories, we would like to point out that, in our view, ancient and medieval authors took for granted a parallelism between thought and reality. By 'parallelism' we mean that they accepted that there are things that exist in reality, and that there can be, and is knowledge of those things. These things as conceived by human understanding are designated by a term. So human understanding involves a subjective element when the thing is conceived or named, but thanks to the parallelism, the thing conceived by man is also the thing in nature. Now different authors put emphasis on different things, i.e. either on the things conceived (the objective (point of view) or on the conception of things (the subjective point of view). The question need not be asked whether a kind of gap had to be overcome: there is no gap. (2)

In a number of studies, L.M. de Rijk has made a fruitful distinction between a name in its descriptive function and in its deictic function. The use of e.g. the term 'man' implies a descriptive function, by which we can describe the class of men, and a deictic function, by which we can refer to the members of the class. Within the latter he distinguishes between 'actuality' and 'factuality'. A term in its deictic function refers to things, though they need not factually exist, i.e. they are contingent. Signification of factual existence is a complementary function of the name.(3)

 In the categories of being items are collected and ordered by which man can name reality, or by means of which he can form complex wholes (for instance 'white man'), and even propositions (for instance 'men are white'), by which he can speak about reality and refer to it in the way he wants. So the theory of the categories is fundamental for philosophy. One could even say that the choice of a particular theory of categories depends on what kind of a philosopher one is.

What is the nature of the members of the categories? Are these members primarily terms which refer to something in reality? Or are they things so far as, and only so far as, these are captured in a linguistic expression or thought? When the nature of the members of the categories has been determined, the question arises for medieval philosophers how they are divided, i.e. how many categories there are, and which. Is their number ten, which is usually supposed to be held by Aristotle. Can this number be established by proof (or deduction)? Especially from John Duns Scotus onwards, not only positive terms, which are a privileged group, are studied, but also non-positive terms, such as 'blindness', fictional terms (for instance 'chimera'), terms of second intention, negative terms etc., which complicates the interpretation of the categories." pp. 182-183.

 

From: Egbert Peter Bos and A. C. van der Helm - The division of Being over the Categories according to Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus. In John Duns Scotus (1265/6-1308): renewal of philosophy. Edited by E. P. Bos. Amsterdam: Rodopi 1998. pp. 183-196

 

(1) See for a general survey of the problems, H. Baumgartner, 'Kategorie, Kategorienlehre', in J. Ritter and K. Gründer (eds.), Historisches Wörterbuch der Philosophie IV, Darmstadt 1976, cols. 714-725.

(2) See esp. L.M. de Rijk, 'Categorization as a Key Notion in Ancient and Medieval Semantics', Vivarium XXVI, 1 (1988), 1-19.

(3) L. M. de Rijk, 'Ist Logos Satz?', in M.F. Fresco a.o., (eds.), Heideggers These vom Ende der Philosophie. Verhandlungen des Leidener Heidegger-Symposiums, April 1984, Bonn 1989, 21-32.

(4) E. Lask, Die Logik der Philosophie und die Kategorienlehre, 1923 (1911) (Gesammelte Schriften 2, 4): Was für eine Kategorienlehre man wählt, hangt davon ab, was für ein Philosoph man ist.

 

 

THE IMPORTANCE OF CATEGORIES COMMENTARIES

"Aristotle's Categories is the subject of an extensive number of commentaries and of an unusual amount of debate, and for good reasons.(1) To begin with, in spite of its relatively short length, it can be a rather difficult text to understand, even for the trained philosopher, to say nothing of those who are just beginning their study of philosophy. Yet, because it laid the foundation for many subsequent philosophical discussions in general, and for logic in particular, it was, during much of the Middle Ages, often the very first philosophical text students encountered. Even contemporary philosophers who are steeped in philosophy and who have studied the Categories in depth often find it difficult, albeit for different reasons. One difficulty, as the ancient commentators on the Categories recognized, is that Aristotle himself is ambiguous about the subject of the work. What exactly is he categorizing? Is it 'things that are' or 'things that are said' or something in between, such as a concept? Furthermore, depending on how one understands its purpose, the Categories can be seen in harmony with, in contrast to, or even in contradiction to, Plato's own theory of the five highest genera. For all of these reasons the Categories has historically acted like a magnet, attracting commentaries from Aristotelians, Platonists, and Stoics alike. Quite naturally, some of these commentaries defend Aristotelianism, whereas others defend either Platonism or Stoicism by attacking Aristotle's Categories. Finally, still others, especially during the Late Middle Ages, use the Categories as a means to expound their own philosophical systems in the process of interpreting Aristotle.

Though many of the ancient and medieval commentators, such as Porphyry, Boethius and Albert the Great, did write original treatises on philosophical issues, their commentaries are in themselves valuable contributions to philosophy, particularly those from the later Middle Ages.(2) Consequently, studies of the various commentaries, and especially those dealing with the Categories, are valuable projects, as the following essays amply demonstrate. As Robert Andrews points out, medieval "Categories commentaries are the repository of centuries of analyses of the basic concepts of Western thought, all carefully organized and awaiting modern rediscovery." (3) And while most of those commentaries are still awaiting rediscovery, the following essays, I hope, will convince everyone that the effort is worthwhile."
 

(1) According to my count of the texts listed by Charles Lohr, roughly two hundred extant Latin commentaries on the Categories were written during the Middle Ages. Of course, this number does not take into account the commentaries that are not extant, nor the ones written in Greek, Arabic, or Hebrew. Cf. the lists of extant commentaries cited by Charles Lohr in Traditio, vols. 23-29.

(2) Compare Fr. Wippel's description of St. Thomas' commentaries: of his theological commentaries, "two are commentaries in the strict sense, i.e., on the De Hebdomadibus of Boethius and on the De divinis nominibus; the other two offer brief expositions of the texts of Boethius and of Peter and use them as occasions for much fuller and highly personal disquisitions by Thomas himself." John E Wippel, The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas Aquinas: From Finite Being to Uncreated Being (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University Press, 2000), p. XVIII.
(3) Robert Andrews, "Question Commentaries on the Categories in the Thirteenth Century," Medioevo 26 (2001), 265-326, p. 266.

 

From: Lloyd A. Newton - Introduction. The importance of medieval commentaries on Aristotle's Categories - in: Lloyd A. Newton (ed.) - Medieval commentaries on Aristotle's Categories - Leiden, Brill, 2008, pp. 1-2.

 

"The interest of Categories commentaries for the contemporary philosopher is worth reviewing. Categorization of items constituting the world is today called ontology; the medievals attempted to classify the world according to the ten categories of Aristotle. The modern accusation, that medieval philosophers were actually dealing with linguistic classification, was in fact acknowledged by many medievals. While the medieval treatment of some categories (and here I am thinking especially of relation) was arcane, resulting from a particular interaction of theology and philosophy, other discussions, such as on the nature of number, involved speculative thought comparable to modern reflections on the subject. Medieval discussions have contributed directly to the development of contemporary philosophical concepts, such as intentionality, "haecceity", and the distinction de ditto / de re. Medieval Categories commentaries are the repository of centuries of analyses of the basic concepts of Western thought, all carefully organized and awaiting modern rediscovery.

The study of the Categories is uniquely able to take advantage of the continuity and traditionalism of the Middle Ages. Not only was the Categories the first Aristotelian work introduced to the Latin Middle Ages, but it was the only work of dialectic available for several centuries, in one form or another. During the beginnings of Latin scholasticism, when the study of philosophy faced a struggle for acceptance, Church Fathers such as Tertullian and Peter Damian denounced all pagan learning, including Aristotle. Against them it was argued that the study of dialectic (and grammar) is useful for the correct interpretation of Sacred Writings. The utilization of the Categories during the period of the seventh through tenth centuries escaped censure in special measure because it was available in two vehicles associated with St. Augustine. Augustine' s De trinitate systematically analyzes whether each category can be applied to God. Boethius' s De trinitate – a model and paradigm of the application of dialectic to theology – follows the relevant sections of Augustine. Furthermore, to Augustine was mistakenly attributed the Themistian paraphrase De decem praedicamentis, (2) placating those who feared the pagan Aristotle. This work was utilized by commentators during the time when no complete work of Aristotle was accessible, as informatively recounted by Marenbon in From the Circle of Alcuin to the School of Auxerre.(3)

When the logica vetus began circulating with the commentaries of Boethius in the 11th century, (4) the Categories was packaged with Porphyry's Isagoge, a work purporting to be an introduction to and an explication of key concepts in the Categories. When the logica nova was introduced, the Categories was recognized as first in a ranked order of logical works; its subject matter, individual words, is requisite for the understanding of sentences (in De interpretatione), syllogisms (Prior analytic) and science (Posterior analytic). This order was later overturned by the terminist logicians, who proposed an analysis of language which treated sentences, rather than words, as fundamental."

 

2. Pseudo-Augustini Paraphrasis Themistiana, ed. L. Minio-Paluello, Brill, Leiden 1961 (A.L. 1, 5).

3. J. Marenbon, From the Circle of Alcuin to the School of Auxerre: Logic, Theology and Philosophy in the Early Middle Ages, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1981.

4. Marebon, From The Circle of Alcuin, 16.

From: Robert Andrews, "Question commentaries on the Categories in the Thirteenth century," Medioevo.Rivista di Storia della filosofia Medievale 26: 265-326 (2001) pp. 266-267.

 

A SELECTION OF LATIN COMMENTATORS ON ARISTOTLE'S CATEGORIES

The Authors to which I devoted an entire page are marked with an asterisk (*)

For the bibliography on medieval authors see: Charles H. Lohr - Latin Aristotle Commentaries. Vol. II. Renaissance Authors - Firenze: Leo S. Olschki, 1988; Vol. III: Index initiorum; Index finium - Firenze: Leo S. Olschki, 1995; Vol. V: Bibliography of secondary literature - Firenze: Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2005.

INDEX

To facilitate research, for every author I give the name in English, Latin, French and Italian.

Marius Victorinus ca. 300 - 370 [Victorinus Afer (Caius Marius Victorinus) - Marius Victorinus - Mario Vittorino]

(Pseudo) Augustine 4th century [(Pseudo) Augustinus - (Pseudo) Augustine - (Pseudo) Agostino]

Boethius ca. 480 - 524/5 [Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus - Boèce - Boezio]

John Scottus Eriugena (*) ca. 800 - ca. 877 [Johannes Scotus (Eriugena) - Jean Scot Erigène - Giovanni Scoto Eriugena]

William of Champeaux ca.1070 - 1122 [Guillelmus de Campellis - Guillaume de Champeaux - Guglielmo di Champeaux]

Garland the Computist11th century [Garlandus Compotista - Garlandus Compotista - Garlando Compotista]

Peter Abelard 1079 - 1142 [Petrus Abaelardus - Pierre Abélard - Pietro Abelardo]

Gilbert of Poitiers 1085/90 - 1154 [Gilbertus Porretanus - Gilbert de la Porrée - Gilberto Porretano]

William of Sherwood 1200/5 - 1266/71[Guillelmus de Shirwode - Guillaume de Shyreswood - Guglielmo di Shyreswood]

Albert the Great 1193/1206 - 1280 [Albertus Magnus - Albert le Grand - Alberto Magno]

Thomas Aquinas 1225/6 - 1274 [Thomas de Aquino - Thomas d'Aquin - Tommaso d'Aquino]

Lambert of Auxerre 13th century [Lambertus Autissiodorensis - Lambert d'Auxerre - Lamberto di Auxerre]

Boetius of Dacia 13th century [Boethius Dacus - Boèce de Dace - Boezio di Dacia]

Peter of Spain13th century [Petrus Hispanus - Pierre d'Éspagne - Petro Ispano]

John Pagus 13th century[Johannes Pagus - Jean Pagus - Giovanni Pago]

Robert Kilwardby ca. 1215 - 1279 Robertus de Kilwardby - Robert Kilwardby - Roberto Kilwardby]

Roger Bacon 1214 - 1294 [Rogerius Bacon - Roger Bacon - Ruggero Bacone]

Martin of Dacia d. 1304 [Martinus de Dacia - Martin de Dacie - Martino di Dacia]

Peter of Auvergne - d. 1304 [Petrus de Alvernia - Perre d'Auvergne - Pietro d'Alvernia]

Simon of Favershamca. 1260 - 1306 [Simonis de Faversham - Simon de Faversham - Simone di Faversham]

Thomas of Sutton ca. 1250 - ca. 1315 [Thomam de Sutona - Thomas of Sutton - Thomas of Sutton]

Giles of Romeca. 1243 - 1316 [Aegidius Romanus - Gilles de Rome - Egidio Romano]

John Duns Scotusc. 1265/6 - 1308 [Johannes Duns Scotus - Jean Duns Scot - Giovanni Duns Scoto]

Radulphus Brito ? - d. 1320 [Radulphus Reginaldi Britonis - Raoul le Breton - Rodolfo il Bretone]

(Pseudo) Richard of Campsall ca. 1324-34 [(Pseudo) Richard de Campsall - (Pseudo) Richard de Campsall - (Pseudo) Riccardo di Campsall]

Walter Burley (or Burleigh) 1274/5 - 1344 [Gualterius de Burley (Burleaus) - Walter Burley - Walter Burley]

William Ockham ca. 1285 - 1347 [Guillelmus de Ockham - Guillaume Ockham (Occam) - Gugliemo di Ockham (Occam)]

Gerardus Odonis ? - 1348 [Gerardus (Giraldus) Odonis - Geraldus Odonis - Geraldus Odonis]

John Buridan ca. 1300 - after 1358 [Johannes Buridanus - Jean Buridan - Giovanni Buridano]

William of Heytesbury before 1313 - 1372/3 [Guillelmus de Heytesbury (Heitesbeurus) - Guillaume Heytesbury - Guglielmo Heytesbury]

Marsilius of Inghen ca. 1340 - 1396 [Marsilius de Inghen - Marsil d'Inghen - Marsilio di Inghen]

Robert Alyngton ? - 1398

Biagio Pelacani of Parma ? - 1416 [Blasius Pelacanius de Parma - Blaise de Parme - Biagio Pelacani da Parma]

Paul of Venice 1369 - 1429 [Paulus Nicolettus Venetus - Paul de Venise - Paolo Veneto]

 

Marius Victorinus

Author of the first Latin translation of the Categories (now lost).

Texts:

For the extant Fragments of Victorinus' translation see Boethius: Categoriarum supplementa.

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

(Pseudo) Augustine

Texts:

Pseudo-Augustini Paraphrasis Themistiana [Categoriae decem]. In Categoriae vel Praedicamenta. Translatio Boethii, Editio Composite, Translatio Guillelmi de Moerbeka, Lemmata e Simplicii commentario decerpta, Pseudo-Augustini Paraphrasis Themistiana. Edited by Minio-Paluello Lorenzo. Bruges: Desclée De Brouwer 1961.

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

Boethius

Texts:

Categoriae vel Praedicamenta. Translatio Boethii, Editio Composite, Translatio Guillelmi de Moerbeka, Lemmata e Simplicii commentario decerpta, Pseudo-Augustini Paraphrasis Themistiana. Edited by Minio-Paluello Lorenzo. Bruges: Desclée De Brouwer 1961.
"This volume contains five Latin versions of Aristotle's Categories. Numbers 1 and 2 both stem from Boethius, who is responsible for the Latin translations that were most widespread. One of them is more literal, the other more elegant. William of Moerbeke, on the other hand, was the author of a Latin version not only of Aristotle's work, but also of Simplicius' commentary, which contains the abbreviated lemmas of the Aristotelian text. Moreover, Aristotle's work was known by means of a Roman paraphrase attributed to Augustine and influenced by Themistius."

Categoriarum supplementa. Porphyrii Isagoge, Translatio Boethii, et Anonymi Fragmentum vulgo vocatum "Liber sex principiorum". Edited by Minio-Paluello Lorenzo. Bruges: Desclée De Brouwer 1966.
"This volume constitutes a supplement to the Latin versions of the Categories. It contains Porphyry's famous Introduction to Aristotle's Categories in Boethius' translation and an extract of an anonymous 12th century Latin writing, which was widespread under the title Liber sex principiorum: it deals mainly with the last six categories, treated more briefly in Aristotle's work. The volume also contains the fragments quoted by Boethius from an older Latin version of Porphyry's Introduction, done by Marius Victorinus."

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

William of Champeaux

Texts:

Available only in manuscript (C8 in Marenbon's list: Medieval Latin Commentaries and Glosses on Aristotelian Logical Texts, before c. 1150 A.D. - see bibliography)

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Garland the Computist

Texts:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Peter Abelard

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Gilbert of Poitiers

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

William of Sherwood

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Albert the Great

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Thomas Aquinas

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

Lambert of Auxerre

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Boetius of Dacia

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

Peter of Spain

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

John Pagus

Texts:

 

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

Robert Kilwardby

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

INDEX

 

Roger Bacon

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Martin of Dacia

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Peter of Auvergne

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Simon of Faversham

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Thomas of Sutton

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Giles of Rome

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

John Duns Scotus

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Radulphus Brito

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

(Pseudo) Richard of Campsall

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Walter Burley (or Burleigh)

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

William of Ockham

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Geraldus Odonis

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

John Buridan

Editions:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

William Heytesbury

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Marsilius of Inghen

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Biagio Pelacani of Parma

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Robert Alyngton

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

Paul of Venice

Texts:

 

Translations:

 

Studies:

 

 

INDEX

 

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

  1. La tradition médiévale des Catégories (XIIe-XVe siècles). Edited by Biard Joël and Rosier-Catach Irène. Louvain: Peeters 2003.
    Actes du XIIIe Symposium européen de logique et de sémantique médiévales (Avignon, 6-10 juin 2000).
    Table des matières: Introduction V; A. Nombre et nature des categories. Valentin Omelyantchyk: La question d'Alexandre dans les commentaires medievaux sur les Catégories 1; Giorgio Pini: Scotus on deducing Aristotle's categories 23; Mischa von Perger: Understanding the categories by division: Walter of Burley vs. William of Ockham 37; William McMahon: Some non-standard views and their definition in Ockham's Nominalism 53; Allan Bäck: Avicenna on relations 69; B. Problèmes linguistiques et logiques. Costantino Marmo: Types of Opposition in the post-predicamenta in Thirteenth-century Commentaries 85; C. H. Kneepkens: Clarembald of Arras and the Notionistae 105; E. Jennifer Ashworth: L'equivocité, l'univocité et les noms propres 127; Claude Panaccio: Connotative concepts and their definition in Ockham's Nominalism 141; Fabienne Pironet: Siger de Brabant et les catégories: la signification des termes accidentels 157; Fabrizio Amerini: Catégories et langage mental: une critique de Francois de Prato a Guillaume d'Ockham 173; Richard Gaskin: Complexe significabilia and Aristotle's Categories 187; C. Problèmes physiques, psychologiques, métaphysiques. E. P. Bos: Petrus Thomae on unity that is less than numerical 207; Christopher Martin: The role of categories in the development
    of Abelard's theory of possibility 225; William Courtenay: The categories, Michael of Massa and natural philosophy at Paris, 1335-1340 243; Simo Knuuttila: Locating emotions in the Categories 261; D. Problemes theologiques. Andrea Tabarroni: "Utrum deus sit in praedicamenta": ontological simplicity and categorical inclusion 271; Luisa Valente: "Talia sunt subiecta qualia predicata permittunt": le principe de l'approche contextuelle 289; E. Monographies. Yukio Iwakuma: William of Champeaux on Aristotle's Categories 313; Joke Spruyt: Twelfth-Century Gloses on Categories 329; Sten Ebbesen: Anonymus D'Orvillensis on the Categories 347; Joël Biard: Le traité sur les catégories de Blaise de Parme 365; Bibliographie 379; Index des noms 399

     

  2. Les Catégories et leur histoire. Edited by Bruun Otto and Corti Lorenzo. Paris: Vrin 2005.
    Table des matières. Jonathan Barnes: Les Catégories et les Catégories 11; Curzio Chiesa: Porphyre et le problème de la substance des Catégories 81; Benjamin Morison: Les Catégories d'Aristote comme introduction à la logique 103; Anthony Kenny: Les Catégories chez les Pères de l'Église latins 121; Michael Frede: Les Catégories d'Aristote et les Pères de l'Église Grecs 135; Alain de Libera: L'onto-théo-logique de Boèce: doctrine des catégories et théorie de la prédication dans le De Trinitate 175; John Marenbon: Les Catégories au début du Moyen Âge 223;
    Sten Ebbesen: Les Catégories au Moyen Âge et au début de la modernité 245; Stéphane Dieble: Catégories, conversation et philosophie chez al-Fàràbi 275; Katerina Ierodiakonou: La réception byzantine des Catégories d'Aristote 307; Otto Bruun et Lorenzo Corti: Bibliographie 341; Index locorum 363; Index nominum et rerum 369-396.

     

  3. Medieval Commentaries on Aristotle's Categories. Edited by Newton Lloyd A. Leiden: Brill 2008.
    Contents: Preface VII-VIII; Lloyd A. Newton: The importance of medieval commentaries on Aristotle's Categories 1; Michael Chase: The medieval posterity of Simplicius' Commentary on the Categories: Thomas Aquinas and al-Farabi ); Allan Bäck: Avicenna the Commentator 31; Bruno Tremblay: Albertus Magnus on the subject of Aristotle's Categories 73; Robert Andrews: Interconnected literal commentaries on the Categories in the Middle Ages 99; Paul Symington: Thomas Aquinas on establishing the identity of Aristotle's Categories 119; Giorgio Pini: Reading Aristotle's Categories as an introduction to logic: Later medieval discussions about its place in the Aristotelian Corpus 145; Martin Pickavé: Simon of Faversham on Aristotle's Categories and the scientia praedicamentorum 183; Lloyd A. Newton: Duns Scotus's account of a propter quid science of the categories 221; Todd Bates: Fine-tuning Pini's reading of Scotus's Categories commentary 259; Giorgio Pini: How Is Scotus's logic related to his metaphysics? A reply to Todd Bates 277; Alexander W. Hall: John Buridan: on Aristotle's Categories 295; Alessandro D. Conti:
    A realist interpretation of the Categories in the Fourteenth century: the Litteralis Sententia Super Praedicamenta Aristotelis of Robert Alyngton 317; Robert Andrews: Thomas Maulevelt's denial of substance 347; Appendix: Thomas Maulevelt: Quaestiones super Praedicamenta: Quaestio 16 358; Alessandro D. Conti: Categories and Universals in the later Middle Ages 369; Bibliography 411; List of Contributors 429; Index 433-439.

    "Originally, I planned to include essays on all three main philosophical traditions alive throughout the Middle Ages, namely, those written by Jewish, Christian and Islamic philosophers. Essays pertaining to the Jewish tradition, however, are noticeably absent due to the lack of contemporary scholarship in this area. Consequently, the preponderance of the remaining articles focuses mainly on Christian philosophers. The scope of the project has, however, stayed away from theological issues, even though discussions of the categories often have tremendous theological implications, especially concerning the doctrines of Transubstantiation and the Trinity. Consequently, the issues raised in the following essays are properly philosophical issues, not theological.
    What follows is a collection of fourteen original essays,4 all devoted to one or more medieval commentaries on Aristotle's Categories, written by a wide variety of philosophers from Europe, Canada, and the United States." p. 2

     

  4. Adamo L., "Boezio e Mario Vittorino traduttori e interpreti dell' Isagoge di Porfirio," Rivista Critica di Storia della Filosofia 22: 141-164 (1967).

     

  5. Andrews Robert, "Peter of Auvergne's commentary on Aristotle's Categories: edition, translation, and analysis", 1988.
    Unpublished Ph. D. thesis, Cornell University, 1988 (two volumes).
    UMI Dissertation Express order number: 8804534.

     

  6. Andrews Robert, "Question commentaries on the Categories in the Thirteenth century," Medioevo.Rivista di Storia della filosofia Medievale 26: 265-326 (2001).
    "A philosophical genre new to the thirteenth century was the question commentary. Commentaries on Aristotle's Categories (a book "read by children"), extending in an unbroken tradition back to antiquity, by 1300 had developed into sophisticated analyses of the fundamental concepts underlying the rest of logic and philosophy. In this article I present, from both published and manuscript sources, texts selected with two purposes in mind: to examine the development of the question commentary out of the inserted dubia of the literal commentary, and to point out a particular shift in the concept of quantity, which may serve as a criterion for relative dating of Categories commentaries."

     

  7. Ashworth Earline Jennifer, "A Thirteenth-century interpretation of Aristotle on equivocation and analogy," Canadian Journal of Philosophy Supplementary volume 17: 85-101 (1991).
    "This paper is a case study of how Aristotle's remarks about equivocation were read in the thirteenth century. I analyze the divisions of equivocation and analogy found in an anonymous commentary on the Sophistici Elenchi written in Paris between 1270 and 1280; and I show the part played by four sources: 1) the Greek commentators of late antiquity; 2) the new translations of Aristotle's Physics and Metaphysics; 3) Arabic works, particularly those of Averroes; 4) new grammatical doctrines, notably modi significandi."

     

  8. Ashworth Earline Jennifer. L'analogie de l'être et les homonymes. Categories, 1 dans la "Guide de l'étudiant". In L'enseignement de la philosophie au XIII siècle. Autour du "Guide de l'étudiant" du ms. Ripoll 109. Actes du Colloque International. Edited by Lafleur Claude and Carrier Joanne. Turnhout: Brepols 1997. pp. 281-295

     

  9. Biard Joël. Sémiologie et théorie des catégories chez Albert de Saxe. In Itinéraires d'Albert de Saxe, Paris-Vienne au XIVe siècle. Edited by Biard Joël. Paris: Vrin 1991. pp.

     

  10. Biard Joël. Le traité sur les catégories de Blaise de Parme. In La tradition médiévale des Catégories (XIIe-XVe siècles). Edited by Biard Joël and Rosier-Catach Irène. Leuwen: Éditions Peeters 2003. pp. 365-378

     

  11. Blum Paul Richard. Der Standardkursus der katolischen Schulphilosophie im 17. Jahrhundert. In Aristotelismus und Renaissance. In memoriam Charles B. Schmitt. Edited by Kessler Eckhard, Lohr Charles H., and Sparn Walter. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz 1988. pp. 127-148

     

  12. Bos Egbert Peter. The division of Being over the Categories according to Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus. In John Duns Scotus (1265/6-1308): renewal of philosophy. Edited by Bos Egbert Peter. Amsterdam: Rodopi 1998. pp. 183-196
    Acts of the Third Symposium organized by the Dutch Society for Medieval Philosophy Medium Aevum (May 23 and 24, 1996).
    "In this contribution we shall investigate the views held by Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas and John Duns Scotus concerning the nature and number of the categories. As is traditional in medieval logic, one first has to determine the nature of something, and then its division (in this case their number). Each in their own way, Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas intended to safeguard the number of ten by way of a proof, i.e. a deduction. Duns Scotus, however, believes that such a proposition is impossible. He also investigates the opinions of those who try to infer the nature of the categories from the various modi predicandi, thus possibly criticizing Albert and Thomas -- be it justly or unjustly. In his opinion, the members of the categories refer to distinct 'realities' ('realities' in a Scotistic sense). None of them can be reduced, neither to each other, nor to something else. All members possess a certain formal reality, although this is not merely identical with the being of an actual thing. (5) Scotus accepts the number of ten categories with reference to tradition, (6) but he gives some negative arguments. He demonstrates that there are neither more categories (for instance motus as an eleventh category), (7) nor less than ten (for instance ens per se and ens in alio alone). So he concludes to the number of ten in a negative way: there are no more, and no less." pp. 183-185

    (5) Th. Kobusch, 'Substanz und Qualität. Die Reduzierung der Kategorien nach Wilhelm von Ockham' in D. Koch and Kl. Bort (eds.), Kategorie und Kategorialität. Historisch-systematische Untersuchungen zum Begriff der Kategorie im Philosophischen Denken. Festschrift für Klaus Hartmann zum 65. Geburtstag, Würzburg 1990, 79.
    (6) Just as his (supposed) disciple Francis of Mayronnes would. E. P. Bos, 'The Theory of Ideas According to Francis of Meyronnes (Commentary on the Sentences (Conflatus) I, dist. 47), in L. Benakis (ed.), Néoplatonisme et philosophie médiévale. Acts du colloque international de Corfu, 6-8 octobre 1995, Bruges 1997, 211-227.
    (7) Which is also suggested by Aristotle in one place of his work, where it said that for each category there is a substrate, for instance for the quale, for the quantum, for the when, for the where, and for the motion. See Aristotle, Metaphysics, VII, 4 1029b 25.

    "Conclusions.
    1. The number of categories turns out to be a problem for medieval philosophers. It is pointed out that the Philosopher himself was not too consistent in his listings of the categories. Avicenna, for instance, does not accept the number of ten just like that.
    2. Some Medievals try to deduce the ten categories. Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas do so each in their own (although quite similar) ways, starting from their own respective ontology.
    3. Scotus does not undertake any kind of deduction. He stresses the realiter difference between the diverse categories. He only accepts the number of ten categories on the basis of tradition. He differentiates between the way the metaphysician and the logician views the list of ten categories.
    4. Scotus does reduce non-entia, figmenta, and so on to entia, as members of the categories. To Scotus this seems to be a matter of far greater concern than it was to his predecessors. After Scotus philosophers are very much interested in the problem whether those non-positive terms can be regarded as members of the ten traditional categories." p. 196

     

  13. Bos Egbert Peter. John Buridan on Substance in his Commentary (Summulae) on Aristotle's Categories. In Signs and signification. Vol. I. Edited by Singh Gill Harjeet and Manetti Giovanni. New Delhi: Bahri Publications 1999. pp. 85-99

     

  14. Bos Egbert Peter. Some notes on the meaning of the term 'substantia' in the tradition of Aristotle's Categories. In L'élaboration du vocabulaire philosophique au Moyen Âge. Edited by Hamesse Jacqueline and Steel Carlos. Turnhout: Brepols 2000. pp. 511-537
    Actes du Colloque international de Louvain-la-Neuve et Leuven, 12-14 septembre 1998 organisé par la Société Internationale pour l'Étude de la philosophie Médiévale

     

  15. Boulnois Olivier. Les catégories selon Duns Scot. In Giovanni Duns Scoto. Studi e ricerche nel VII Centenario della sua morte in onore di P. César Saco Alarcón. Vol I. Edited by Nuñez Martín Carbajo. Roma: Antonianum 2008. pp. 357-377

     

  16. Courtine Jean-François. Note complémentaire pour l'histoire du vocabulaire de l'être. Les traductions latines d' ousía et la compréhension romano-stoïcienne de l'être. In Concepts et Catégories de la pensée antique. Edited by Aubenque Pierre. Paris: Vrin 1980. pp. 33-87
    Reprinted and updated in: J-F. Courtine - Les catégories de l'être. Études de philosophie ancienne et médiévale - Paris, Press Universitaires de France, 2003, pp. 11-77.

     

  17. de Libera Alain. Boèce et l'interprétation médiévale des Catégories. De la paronymie à la denominatio. In Aristotelica Secunda. Mélanges offerts a Christian Rutten. Edited by Motte André and Denooz Joseph. Liège: Université de Liège. Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres 1995. pp. 255-264

     

  18. de Libera Alain. Boèce et l'interprétation médiévale des Catégories: de la paronymie à la denominatio. In Aristotelica Secunda. Mélanges offerts à Christian Rutten. Edited by Motte André and Denooz Joseph. Liège: Université de Liège, C.I.P.L. 1996. pp. 255-265

     

  19. de Rijk Lambertus Marie, "'Categorization' as a key notion in ancient and medieval semantics," Vivarium 26: 1-18 (1988).
    "The aim of this paper is to argue for a twofold thesis: (a) for Aristotle the verb 'katêgorein' does not as such stand for statemental predication, let alone of the well-known `S is P' type, and (b) 'non-statemental predication' or `categorization' plays an important role in Ancient and Medieval philosophical procedure.
    1. Katêgorein and katêgoria in Aristotle
    Aristotle was the first to use the word `category' (katêgoria) as a technical term in logic and philosophy. It is commonly taken to mean `highest predicate' and explained in terms of statement-making. From the logical point of view categories are thus considered `potential predicates'.(*)
    (...)
    1.3 Name giving ('categorization') as the key tool in the search for 'true substance'
    What Aristotle actually intends in his metaphysical discussions in the central books of his Metaphysics (Z-Th) is to discover the proper candidate for the name 'ousia'. According to Aristotle, the primary kind of 'being' or 'being as such' (to on hêi on) can only be found in 'being-ness' (ousia; see esp. Metaph. 1028b2). Unlike Plato, however, Aristotle is sure to find 'being as such' in the domain of things belonging to the everyday world. Aristotle's most pressing problem is to grasp the things' proper nature qua beings. In the search for an answer name-giving plays a decisive role: the solution to the problem consists in finding the most appropriate ('essential') name so as to bring everyday being into the discourse in such a way that precisely its 'beingness' is focussed upon.
    (...)
    2. The use of 'praedicare' in Boethius
    The Greek phrase katêgorein ti kata tinos is usually rendered in Latin as praedicare aliquid de aliquo. The Latin formula primarily means `to say something of something else' (more precisely `of somebody'). Of course, the most common meaning of the Latin phrase is `to predicate something of something else in making a statement of the form S = P'. However, the verb praedicare, just as its Greek counterpart katêgorein, is used more than once merely in the sense of `naming' or `designating by means of a certain name', regardless of the syntactic role that name performs in a statement. In such cases praedicare stands for the act of calling up something under a certain name (designation), a procedure that we have labelled `categorization'. (...)
    Boethius' use of praedicare is quite in line with what is found in other authors. Along with the familiar use of the verb for statemental predication, Boethius also frequently uses praedicare in the sense of `naming' or `designating something under a certain name' whereby the use of the designating word in predicate position is, sometimes even explicitly, ruled out." pp. 1, 4, 9-10.

    (*) See L. M. de Rijk, The Categories as Classes of Names (= On Ancient and Medieval Semantics 3), in: Vivarium, 18 (1980), 1-62, esp. 4-7

     

  20. Demetracopoulos John A., "Aristotle's Categories in the Greek and Latin Medieval exegetical tradition. The case of the argument for the non-simultaneity of relatives," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Âge grec et latin 66: 117-134 (1996).

     

  21. Demetracopoulos John. Alcuin and the realm of application of Aristotle's categories. In Intellect and imagination in medieval philosophy Intellect and imagination in medieval philosophy = Intelecto e imaginação na filosofia medieval. Edited by Maria Cândida da Costa Reis Monteir Pacheco and José Francisco Meirinhos. Turnhout: Brepols 2006. pp. 1733-1742

     

  22. Desbordes Françoise. Homonymie et synonymie d'aprés les textes théoriques latins. In L'ambiguité. Cinq études historiques. Edited by Rosier Irène. Lille: Presses Universitaires 1988. pp. 51-102

     

  23. Ebbesen Sten. Medieval Latin Glosses and Commentaries on Aristotelian logical texts of the Twelfth and Thirteenth centuries. In Glosses and commentaries on Aristotelian logical texts: The Syriac, Arabic and Medieval Latin traditions. Edited by Burnett Charles. London: The Warburg Institute, University of London 1993. pp. 129-177

     

  24. Ebbesen Sten, "Anonymus D'Orvillensis' commentary on Aristotle's Categories," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Âge grec et latin 70: 229-423 (1999).

     

  25. Ebbesen Sten, "A Porretanean commentary on Aristotle's Categories," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Âge grec et latin 72: 35-88 (2001).

     

  26. Ebbesen Sten. Late-ancient ancestors of medieval philosophical Commentaries. In Il Commento filosofico nell'Occidente latino (secoli XIII/XV) / The philosophical commentary uin the Latin West (13 - 15th centuries). Edited by Fioravanti Gianfranco, Leonardi Claudio, and Perfetti Stefano. Turnhout: Brepols 2002. pp. 1-15
    Reprinted as Chapter 7 in: S. Ebbesen - Greek-Latin philosophical interaction. Collected essays of Sten Ebbesen. Volume 1 - Aldershot, Ashgate, 2008, pp. 97-106.

     

  27. Gibson Margaret, "Latin commentaries on logic before 1200," Bulletin de Philosophie Médiévale 24: 54-64 (1982).

     

  28. Hadot Pierre. Porphyre et Victorinus. Paris: Études augustiniennes 1968.
    Two volumes; Vol. 2 contains Latin texts of Victorinus and Greek texts, with French translation, of Porphyry.

     

  29. Hochshild Joshua, "Words, concepts and things. Cajetan on the subject of the Categories," Dionysius 19: 159-166 (2001).

     

  30. Hugonnard-Roche Henri, "Les "Catégories" d'Aristote comme introduction à la philosophie, dans un Commentaire syriaque de Sergius de Res' aina (d. 536)," Documenti e Studi sulla Tradizione Medievale 8: 339-364 (1997).

     

  31. Iwakuma Yukio. William of Champeaux on Aristotle's Categories. In La tradition médiévale des Catégories (XIIe-XVe siècles). Edited by Biard Joël and Rosier-Catach Irène. Leuwen: Éditions Peeters 2003. pp. 313-328

     

  32. Klima Gyula. Ockham's semantics and ontology of the categories. In The Cambridge Companion to Ockham. Edited by Spade Paul Vincent. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1999. pp. 118-142

     

  33. Livesey Steven J., "Medieval Latin Aristotle Commentators: addenda and biographical precisions," Bulletin de Philosophie Médiévale 43: 95-132 (2001).

     

  34. Lohr Charles H. Renaissance Latin translations of the Greek commentaries on Aristotle. In Humanism and early modern philosophy. Edited by Kraye Jill and Stone M.W.F. New York: Routledge 2000. pp. 24-40

     

  35. Marenbon John. John Scottus and the 'Categoriae Decem'. In Eriugena: Studien zu seinen Quellen. Vorträge des III. Internationalen Eriugena-Colloquiums (Freiburg/Br. 27.-30.10. 1979). Edited by Beierwaltes Werner. Heidelberg: C. Winter 1980. pp. 117-134
    Reprinted as Chapter V in: John Marenbon - Aristotelian logic, Platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West - Aldershot - Ashgate, 2000.

     

  36. Marenbon John. From the Circle of Alcuin to the School of Auxerre. Logic, theology and philosophy in the early Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1981.

     

  37. Marenbon John, "Vocalism, nominalism and the commentaries on the Categories from the earlier Twelfth century," Vivarium 30: 51-61 (1992).
    Reprinted as Chapter XIII in: John Marenbon - Aristotelian logic, Platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West - Aldershot - Ashgate, 2000.

     

  38. Marenbon John. Medieval Latin Commentaries and Glosses on Aristotelian Logical Texts, before c. 1150 A.D. In Glosses and commentaries on Aristotelian logical texts: The Syriac, Arabic and Medieval Latin traditions. Edited by Burnett Charles. London: The Warburg Institute, University of London 1993. pp. 77-127
    Reprinted as Chapter II in: John Marenbon - Aristotelian logic, Platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West - Aldershot - Ashgate, 2000.

     

  39. Marenbon John. Glosses and commentaries on the Categories and De interpretatione before Abelard. In Dialektik und Rhetorik im früheren und hohen Mittelalter. Rezeption, Überlieferung und gesellschaftliche Wirkung antiker Gelehrsamkeit vornehmlich im 9. und 12. Jahrhundert. Edited by Fried Johannes. München: Oldenbourg 1997. pp. 21-49
    Reprinted as Chapter IX in: John Marenbon - Aristotelian logic, Platonism, and the context of early medieval philosophy in the West - Aldershot - Ashgate, 2000.

     

  40. McCord Adams Marylin, "Re-reading De Grammatico, or Anselm's Introduction to Aristotle's Categories," Documenti e Studi sulla Tradizione Filosofica Medievale 11: 83-112 (2000).

     

  41. McMahon William, "Radulphus Brito on the sufficiency of the categories," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Âge grec et latin 39: 81-96 (1981).

     

  42. Pattin A. Pour l'histoire du Commentaire sur les Catégories d'Aristote de Simplicius au Moyen Age. In Arts libéraux et philosophie au Moyen Age. Paris: Vrin 1969. pp. 1073-1078
    Actes du Quatrième Congrés International de philosophie Médiévale. Université de montréal, Montréal, Canada 27 août - 2 septembre 1967.

     

  43. Pinborg Jan, "Petrus de Alvernia on the Categories," Cahiers de l'Institut du Moyen-Âge grec et latin 15: 40-46 (1975).

     

  44. Pini Giorgio. Categories and logic in Duns Scotus. An interpretation of Aristotle's Categories inn the late Thirteenth century. Leiden: Brill 2002.

     

  45. Pini Giorgio. Scotus on deducing Aristotle's categories. In La tradition médiévale des Catégories (XIIe-XIVe siécles). XIIIe Symposium européen de logique et de sémantique médiévales. Avignon 6-10 juin 2000. Edited by Biard Joël and Rosier-Catach Irène. Louvain: Éditions Peeters 2003. pp. 23-35

     

  46. Pini Giorgio. The transcendentals of logic: Thirteenth-century discussions on the subject matter of Aristotle's Categories. In Die Logik des Transzendentalen. Festschrift für Jan A. Aertsen. Edited by Pickavé Martin. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter 2003. pp. 140-159

     

  47. Pini Giorgio, "Scotus' realist conception of the categories: his legacy to late medieval debates," Vivarium 43: 63-110 (2005).

     

  48. Scheu Marina. The categories of being in Aristotle and St. Thomas. Washington: Catholic University of America Press 1944.

     

  49. Scheu Marina M. The Categories of Being in Aristotle and St. Thomas. Washington: Catholic University of America Press 1944.
    Contents: List of tables VIII; Preface IX; List of abbreviations XIII; Part I. Categories in Aristotle. I. The history and general nature of the categories 3; II. The logical aspect of the categories in Aristotle 13; III. The metaphysical aspect of the categories in Aristotle 23; Part II. Categories in St. Thomas. IV. The history of the categories from Aristotle to St. Thomas 38; V. General nature of the categories in Thomistic philosophy 46; VI. The nature of substance 64; VII. The nature of accident 77; Summary and conclusion 96; Bibliography 98; Index 102-109.

    "Summary and conclusion.
    In this study we have endeavored to set forth the doctrine of Aristotle and St. Thomas on the categories of being. We have found that for Aristotle, the originator of the doctrine, as well as for St. Thomas, who developed and perfected it, the categories are means by which we know and classify all reality. Hence it follows that in order to give a true report of reality the categories must be at least fundamentally real. That such was the opinion of these two philosophers we have tried to show. Moreover, since the categories are a means of apprehension in logic and of order in metaphysics, they must never be made an end in themselves for to consider them as such would distort reality. But, as we have seen, Aristotle and St. Thomas never lost sight of their true character.
    They agree:
    I. That the categories are modes of predication about real being in logic, and modes of being in metaphysics.
    2. That being is not a genus predicated univocally of each of the categories, but rather, it is a transcendental notion predicated analogically of each one of them.
    That the categories are supreme genera.
    That the primary distinction among the categories is that between substance and accidents.
    That one category is not contained under another, but each is ultimately distinct from the others.
    That the principal category is substance, which is being simply as being, and hence the being of metaphysics par excellence.
    St. Thomas advances beyond Aristotle in that :
    1. He presents a logical plan by which the categories are deduced from the modes of predication about real being.
    He distinguishes form, as a part of the essence of a thing, from essence, which includes all the essential principles.
    2. Aided by his consideration of the Trinity, he analyzes more acutely the nature of individual substance.
    His analysis of the categories is much more acute and penetrating, as indicating the precise modes of inherence and the reality of each of the categories of accidents.
    His development of the extrinsic categories shows that they are less distinct and less real than the intrinsic categories, and hence are more properly subjects of logic than of metaphysics.
    In so far as the extrinsic categories give a deeper grasp of the reality of the object to which they are ascribed, they merit some consideration in the field of metaphysics." pp. 96-97

     

  50. Wippel John F., "Thomas Aquinas's derivation of the Aristotelian Categories (Predicaments)," Journal of the History of Philosophy 25: 13-33 (1987).

     

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