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  1. Nicholas of Autrecourt.Christophe Grellard - 2011 - In H. Lagerlund (ed.), Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy. Springer. pp. 876--878.
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  • The Impact of Ockham's Reading of the Physics On the Mertonians and Parisian Terminists.André Goddu - 2001 - Early Science and Medicine 6 (3):204-236.
    This article summarizes Ockham's interpretation of Aristotle's categories, showing how his account of connotative concepts introduced a revision in the Aristotelian doctrine about the relation between mathematics and physics. The article shows that Ockham's account influenced William of Heytesbury, John Dumbleton, and Nicholas Oresme to re-interpret disciplinary relations and disciplinary boundaries. They did so, however, in ways compatible with other basic principles of Aristotelian philosophy of nature; nevertheless, their modifications of the Aristotelian account of mathematics stimulated later philosophers to construct (...)
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  • La hiérarchie des degrés d'être chez Nicole Oresme.Jean Celeyrette & Edmond Mazet - 1998 - Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 8 (1):45-.
    N. Oresme passe pour l'un des rares grand universitaire médiéval mathématicien. C'est ainsi que son grand traité De Configurationibus qualitatum et motuum est vu traditionnellement comme un traité de mathématiques et analysé comme tel. En fait, l'examen de ses Questiones super Physicam montre qu'Oresme est un philosophe de la nature original. Ses thèses sont souvent en opposition avec celles de Buridan et saméthode est différente: ses arguments empruntent fort peu à la logique et presque exclusivement à la philosophie naturelle.
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  • Nicole oresme.Stefan Kirschner - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Thought Experiments and Inertial Motion: A Golden Thread in the Development of Mechanics.Mark Shumelda & James Robert Brown - 2009 - Rivista di Estetica 42:71-96.
    The history of mechanics has been extensively investigated in a number of historical works. The full story from the Greeks and medievals through the Scientific Revolution to the modern era is long and complex. But it is also incomplete. Studies to date have been admirably thorough in putting empirical discoveries into proper perspective and in making clear the great importance of mathematical innovations. But there has been surprisingly little regard for the role of thought experiments in the development of mechanics. (...)
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