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Grasping the philosophical relevance of past philosophies

Claude Panaccio

pp. 439-451

This chapter examines what is needed in principle for a historian of philosophy to bring out the relevance of certain past theoretical texts for today's philosophical discussions. Three conditions are thus spelled out: (1) the historian should be able to identify the referents of (some of) the non-theoretical concrete terms of the relevant texts; (2) the historian should master the inferences that are acceptable within the past doctrines in question; (3) he or she should make it clear on that basis how these doctrines dealt with phenomena that are still taken to be philosophically problematic, especially logico-linguistic phenomena such as predication, ambiguities, modalities, indexicality, self-reference and so on. How all of this in turn requires a special sort of historical contextualization is illustrated with the case of Anselm of Canterbury's De grammatico.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-66634-1_26

Full citation:

Panaccio, C. (2017)., Grasping the philosophical relevance of past philosophies, in J. Pelletier & M. Roques (eds.), The language of thought in late medieval philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 439-451.

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