Home » Publications » Books » John Buridan Quaestiones super libros De generatione et corruptione Aristotelis
John Buridan Quaestiones super libros De generatione et corruptione Aristotelis
A Critical Edition with an Introduction
Edited by Michiel Streijger, Paul J.J.M. Bakker, Radboud University Nijmegen, Johannes M.M.H. Thijssen, Radboud University Nijmegen
Biographical note
Michiel Streijger, Ph.D. (2008) in Philosophy, Radboud University Nijmegen, studied Classics and Philosophy. At present he is teacher in classics at the Gymnasium Juvenaat in Bergen op Zoom.
Paul J.J.M. Bakker is professor of Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy at Radboud University Nijmegen. His research focuses on the tradition of commentaries on Aristotle’s De anima from the late Middle Ages until the seventeenth century.
Johannes M.M.H. Thijssen is professor of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy at Radboud University Nijmegen. His research interests are in the history of philosophy and science.
Paul J.J.M. Bakker is professor of Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy at Radboud University Nijmegen. His research focuses on the tradition of commentaries on Aristotle’s De anima from the late Middle Ages until the seventeenth century.
Johannes M.M.H. Thijssen is professor of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy at Radboud University Nijmegen. His research interests are in the history of philosophy and science.
Readership
All those interested in the history of (medieval) philosophy and science who wish to study the original source texts.
Reviews
...Buridan’s text at long last available to a larger population of historians of medieval philosophy and science.
Peter G. Sobol, Journal of the History of Philosophy, 50:1 january 2012, pp. 140-141
Peter G. Sobol, Journal of the History of Philosophy, 50:1 january 2012, pp. 140-141
Table of contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Life and works
2. John Buridan’scommentaries on Aristotle’s De generatione et corruption
2.1.1 The Expositio ofAristotle’sDe generatione et corruption
2.2 The Quaestiones super libros De generatione et corruptione.
2.2.1 Version A
2.2.2 Version B
2.2.2.1 Description of the manuscripts
2.2.2.2 The manuscript tradition
3. The edition
4. Bibliography
QUAESTIONES SUPER LIBROS
DE GENERATIONE ET CORRUPTIONE ARISTOTELIS
LIBER I
1. Utrum de generabilibus et corruptibilibus sit scientia
2. Utrum ad corruptionem rerum corruptibilium corrumpatur scientia de eis
3. Utrum vox significet idem re existente et corrupta
4. Utrum si impossibile est elementa generari, impossibile est ea alterari 5. Utrum corpus sit divisibile secundum quodlibet signum eius et secundum quemlibet punctum eius
6. Utrum possible est aliquid simpliciter generari
7. Utrum omnis generatio unius sit corruption alterius
8. Utrum inanimate sit alia forma substantialis ab anima
9. Utrum omnis generatio differt ab alteratione
10. Utrum illa descriptio generationis est bona in qua dicitur ‘generatio est transmutatio totius in totum non manente aliquo sensibili’
11. Utrum rarefactio sit proprie augmentatio
12. Utrum in augmentatione viventis cibus augetur vel corpus animatum
13. Utrum id quodaugetur manet simpliciter idem ante et post
14. Utrum eius quod augetur quaelibet pars augeatur
15. Utrum augmentatio fiat secundum partes formales et non secundum partes materiales
16. Utrum augmentatio sit motus proprie, distinctus a motu locali, abalteratione et a generatione substantiali
17. Utrum omne animatum quamdiu vivit nutritur, sednon quamdiu vivit augetur
18. Utrum omne agens in aliquod passum tangat illud passum
19. Utrum omne agens agendo repatiatur et omne passum patiendo reagat
20. Utrum possibile est esse actionem abaequalitate vel etiam a proportione minoris inaequalitatis
21. Utrum formae substantiales elementorum suscipiunt magis et minus 22. Utrum formae substantiales elementorum maneant in mixto
23. Utrum mixtio sit possibilis
24. Utrum quod est simpliciter corruptum possit reverti idem in numero
LIBER II
1. Utrum tantum sint quattuor primae qualitates
2. Utrum quattuor primarum qualitatum duae sunt activae, scilicet calidum et frigidum, et duae passivae, scilicet humidum et siccum
3. Utrum sint quattuor elementa et non plura
4. Utrum ignis sit contraries aquae et aer terrae
5. Utrum aqua sit primo frigida
6. Utrum caliditas aeris et caliditas ignis sunt eiusdem rationis sive eiusdem speciei, differentes solum secundum intensius et remissius
7. Utrum qualitas symbola maneat eadem in generato quae fuit in corrupto
8. Utrum elementa habentia symbolum facilius et citius transmutentur ad invicem quam non habentia
9. Utrum quaelibet duo elementa non habentia symbolum possent transmutari inquodlibet tertium elementum et quod habentia symbolum non possent sic transmutari ad tertium
10. Utrum omne mixtum quod est circa medium locum sit compositum ex omnibus simplicibus
11. Utrum possible sit esse aliquod mixtum simpliciter et perfecte temperatum
12. Utrum calidum, frigidum, humidum et siccum, id est quattuor primae qualitates, sint principalia agentia in generatione mixtorum
13. Utrum sint generations et corruptions perpetuae
14. Utrum possint perpetuari in hoc mundo generations et corruptiones, si non essent plures motus caelestes
Index Nominum
Index Locorum
Introduction
1. Life and works
2. John Buridan’scommentaries on Aristotle’s De generatione et corruption
2.1.1 The Expositio ofAristotle’sDe generatione et corruption
2.2 The Quaestiones super libros De generatione et corruptione.
2.2.1 Version A
2.2.2 Version B
2.2.2.1 Description of the manuscripts
2.2.2.2 The manuscript tradition
3. The edition
4. Bibliography
QUAESTIONES SUPER LIBROS
DE GENERATIONE ET CORRUPTIONE ARISTOTELIS
LIBER I
1. Utrum de generabilibus et corruptibilibus sit scientia
2. Utrum ad corruptionem rerum corruptibilium corrumpatur scientia de eis
3. Utrum vox significet idem re existente et corrupta
4. Utrum si impossibile est elementa generari, impossibile est ea alterari 5. Utrum corpus sit divisibile secundum quodlibet signum eius et secundum quemlibet punctum eius
6. Utrum possible est aliquid simpliciter generari
7. Utrum omnis generatio unius sit corruption alterius
8. Utrum inanimate sit alia forma substantialis ab anima
9. Utrum omnis generatio differt ab alteratione
10. Utrum illa descriptio generationis est bona in qua dicitur ‘generatio est transmutatio totius in totum non manente aliquo sensibili’
11. Utrum rarefactio sit proprie augmentatio
12. Utrum in augmentatione viventis cibus augetur vel corpus animatum
13. Utrum id quodaugetur manet simpliciter idem ante et post
14. Utrum eius quod augetur quaelibet pars augeatur
15. Utrum augmentatio fiat secundum partes formales et non secundum partes materiales
16. Utrum augmentatio sit motus proprie, distinctus a motu locali, abalteratione et a generatione substantiali
17. Utrum omne animatum quamdiu vivit nutritur, sednon quamdiu vivit augetur
18. Utrum omne agens in aliquod passum tangat illud passum
19. Utrum omne agens agendo repatiatur et omne passum patiendo reagat
20. Utrum possibile est esse actionem abaequalitate vel etiam a proportione minoris inaequalitatis
21. Utrum formae substantiales elementorum suscipiunt magis et minus 22. Utrum formae substantiales elementorum maneant in mixto
23. Utrum mixtio sit possibilis
24. Utrum quod est simpliciter corruptum possit reverti idem in numero
LIBER II
1. Utrum tantum sint quattuor primae qualitates
2. Utrum quattuor primarum qualitatum duae sunt activae, scilicet calidum et frigidum, et duae passivae, scilicet humidum et siccum
3. Utrum sint quattuor elementa et non plura
4. Utrum ignis sit contraries aquae et aer terrae
5. Utrum aqua sit primo frigida
6. Utrum caliditas aeris et caliditas ignis sunt eiusdem rationis sive eiusdem speciei, differentes solum secundum intensius et remissius
7. Utrum qualitas symbola maneat eadem in generato quae fuit in corrupto
8. Utrum elementa habentia symbolum facilius et citius transmutentur ad invicem quam non habentia
9. Utrum quaelibet duo elementa non habentia symbolum possent transmutari inquodlibet tertium elementum et quod habentia symbolum non possent sic transmutari ad tertium
10. Utrum omne mixtum quod est circa medium locum sit compositum ex omnibus simplicibus
11. Utrum possible sit esse aliquod mixtum simpliciter et perfecte temperatum
12. Utrum calidum, frigidum, humidum et siccum, id est quattuor primae qualitates, sint principalia agentia in generatione mixtorum
13. Utrum sint generations et corruptions perpetuae
14. Utrum possint perpetuari in hoc mundo generations et corruptiones, si non essent plures motus caelestes
Index Nominum
Index Locorum
€107.00$147.00
Louise Hill Curth, University of Winchester
'A plaine and easie waie to remedie a horse': equine medicine in early modern England is Louise Hill Curth's groundbreaking new book on the health and illness of what were historically the most important domesticated, working animals.
€107.00$147.00
Edited by Jim Bennett, Science Museum, London and Sofia Talas, University of Paduan
Cabinets of Experimental Philosophy in Eighteenth-Century Europe explains how collections of instruments for demonstrating the principles of Newtonian science were offered successfully to a broad public audience and formed the basis of an intellectual, educational and cultural movement that ...
€101.00$138.00
Patrick J. Boner, Johns Hopkins University
Spanning the course of his career, this book brings new light to Kepler’s vitalistic views and their central place in his world picture. It challenges our view of Kepler as a nascent mechanical philosopher who fell back on an older form of physics.
€129.00$179.00
Natalia Tsvetkova St. Petersburg State University
Failure of American and Soviet Cultural Imperialism In German Universities, 1945-1990 shows how and why both American and Soviet policies of the transformation of German universities eventually failed.
€129.00$179.00
Tobias Krüger, Staatsarchiv Solothurn
In Discovering the Ice Ages Tobias Krüger explores the discovery of the Ice Ages over the course of the 19th century, how the idea was received, and what further research it stimulated for the first time from an international perspective.
€105.00$146.00
Edited by Bernard Lightman, York University, Gordon McOuat, University of King's College, and Larry Stewart, University of Saskatchwan
In The Circulation of Knowledge Between Britain, India and China, twelve scholars examine how knowledge, things and people moved within, and between, the East and the West from the early modern period to the twentieth century.
€134.00$184.00
Edited by Joella G. Yoder, University of Wisconsin
A Catalogue of the Manuscripts of Christiaan Huygens inventories all known manuscripts written by Christiaan Huygens, all letters to or from him, plus family papers at UB Leiden. It also provides complete manuscript citations for Oeuvres Complètes.
€229.00$318.00
Edited by André Holenstein, University of Bern, Hubert Steinke, University of Bern and Martin Stuber, University of Bern in collaboration with Philippe Rogger
In Scholars in Action, an international group of 40 authors open up new perspectives on the eighteenth-century culture of knowledge, with a particular focus on scholars and their various practices.
€105.00$146.00
Edited by Paul J.J.M. Bakker, Radboud University Nijmegen, Sander W. de Boer, University of Groningen, and Cees Leijenhorst, Radboud University Nijmegen
Psychology and the Other Disciplines looks at how Aristotelian psychology developed from the medieval to the early modern period, by studying its interactions with the other philosophical disciplines, medicine, and theology.
€109.00$152.00
Karel Davids, VU University Amsterdam
In Religion, Technology, and the Great and Little Divergences Karel Davids analyses the influence of religious contexts on technological change in China and Europe between c.700 and 1800.
- 1 of 4
- ››
No additional information