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7 - The origins of the theory of the properties of terms

from IV - Logic in the high middle ages: semantic theory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

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Summary

Language, thought, and reality

Beginning as early as the eleventh century, the relationship between thought and language was a focal point of medieval thought. This does not amount to saying that the basic nature of that relationship was being studied; rather it was accepted without discussion, as it had been in antiquity. Thought was considered to be linguistically constrained by its very nature; thought and language were taken to be related both to each other and to reality in their elements and their structure. In the final analysis, language, thought, and reality were considered to be of the same logical coherence. Language was taken to be not only an instrument of thought, expression, and communication but also in itself an important source of information regarding the nature of reality. In medieval thought, logico-semantic and metaphysical points of view are, as a result of their perceived interdependence, entirely interwoven.

The first medieval scholars to have a professional interest in language as such were the grammarians. Their interest was focused on what we would call logico-semantical and syntactical questions; this is especially true of the School of Chartres as early as the 1030s. No longer were words studied as separate units quite apart from their linguistic context; rather it was that context itself that attracted the most intense interest. I have labelled this concentration of attention the ‘contextual approach’ (De Rijk 1967, pp. 113–17; 123–5). The statement (proposition), not isolated words, was taken to be the fundamental unit of meaning.

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The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy
From the Rediscovery of Aristotle to the Disintegration of Scholasticism, 1100–1600
, pp. 159 - 173
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1982

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References

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,Anonymous (1979). Sincategoreumata Monacensia in Braakhuis, 1979,1Google Scholar
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Rijk, L. M. ed. (1962–7). Logica modernorum: A contribution to the History of Early Terminist Logic. I: On the Twelfth Century Theories of Fallacy (1962); II, 1: The Origin and Early Development of the Theory of Supposition; II, 2: Texts and Indices (1967), Van GorcumGoogle Scholar
Rijk, L. M. ed. (1971–3). ‘The Development of Suppositio naturalis in Mediaeval Logic’, Vivarium 9:.; 11:.Google Scholar
Roger, Bacon (1940). Sumule dialectices, ed Steele, Robert, in Opera hactenus inedita Rogeri Baconi, fasc. 15, Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
William, Sherwood (1937), Introductiones in logicam, ed. Grabmann, M. (Sitzungsberichte der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Phil.-hist. Abteilung 1937, 10), Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der WissenschaftenGoogle Scholar

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