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  1. John Locke and the Oxford Training in Logic and Metaphysics.W. Henry Kenney - 1959 - Saint Louis, MO, USA: Saint Louis University, Unpublished Dissertation.
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  • The Textbook Tradition in Natural Philosophy 1600–1650.Patricia Reif - 1969 - Journal of the History of Ideas 30 (1):17.
    'During the course of the seventeenth century, within the scholastic tradition itself, commentaries on Aristotle's natural philosophical works increasingly gave way to textbooks and compendia organized along thematic lines' (Dear 1985, 161).
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  • Thomistic Natural Philosophy and the Scientific Revolution.Eric A. Reitan - 1996 - Modern Schoolman 73 (3):265-281.
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  • The Age of the Sign: New Light on the Role of the Fourteenth Century in the History of Semiotics.Ludger Kaczmarek - 1992 - Dialogue 31 (3):509-.
    Semiotics, the age-old investigation of signs, is still striving for acknowledgement as a scientific discipline. Though the ‘linguistic turn’ in the philosophical disciplines seemed to be followed by a ‘semiotic turn’ in many sciences during the 1970s, efforts were not crowned by great success. When seen from a certain distance, a definition of semiotics as a discipline can only be obtained from its history. Research into the sources of the human pre-occupation with signs, and with concepts or conceptions of signs, (...)
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  • Quantification in Medieval Physics.A. Crombie - 1961 - Isis 52:143-160.
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  • Quantification in Medieval Physics.A. C. Crombie - 1961 - Isis 52 (2):143-160.
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  • The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability Before Pascal.James Franklin - 2001 - Baltimore, USA: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    How were reliable predictions made before Pascal and Fermat's discovery of the mathematics of probability in 1654? What methods in law, science, commerce, philosophy, and logic helped us to get at the truth in cases where certainty was not attainable? The book examines how judges, witch inquisitors, and juries evaluated evidence; how scientists weighed reasons for and against scientific theories; and how merchants counted shipwrecks to determine insurance rates. Also included are the problem of induction before Hume, design arguments for (...)
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  • Medieval semiotics.Stephan Meier-Oeser - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • The scholastic background.Roger Ariew & Alan Gabbey - 1998 - In Daniel Garber & Michael Ayers (eds.), The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1--425.
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  • Mental furniture from the philosophers.James Franklin - 1983 - Et Cetera 40:177-191.
    The abstract Latinate vocabulary of modern English, in which philosophy and science are done, is inherited from medieval scholastic Latin. Words like "nature", "art", "abstract", "probable", "contingent", are not native to English but entered it from scholastic translations around the 15th century. The vocabulary retains much though not all of its medieval meanings.
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  • The state of nature and the origin of the state.David E. Luscombe - 1982 - In Norman Kretzmann, Anthony Kenny & Jan Pinborg (eds.), Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 16001--757.
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  • Sense, intellect, and imagination in Albert, Thomas, and Siger.Edward P. Mahoney - 1982 - In Norman Kretzmann, Anthony Kenny & Jan Pinborg (eds.), Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 602--622.
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  • John Locke and the Oxford Training in Logic and Metaphysics.W. Henry Kenney - 1959 - Dissertation, Saint Louis University
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