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E-book
Author Nauta, Lodi, author.

Title Philosophy and the language of the people : the claims of common speech from Petrarch to Locke / Lodi Nauta, University of Groningen
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (vi, 275 pages)
Contents Cover -- Half-title page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Early Humanist Critics of Scholastic Language: Francesco Petrarch and Leonardo Bruni -- Chapter 2 From a Linguistic Point of View: Lorenzo Valla's Critique of Aristotelian-Scholastic Philosophy -- Chapter 3 Giovanni Pontano on Language, Meaning, and Grammar -- Chapter 4 Juan Luis Vives on Language, Knowledge, and the Topics -- Chapter 5 Anti-Essentialism and the Rhetoricization of Knowledge: Mario Nizolio's Humanist Attack on Universals -- Chapter 6 Skepticism and the Critique of Language in Francisco Sanches -- Chapter 7 Thomas Hobbes and the Rhetoric of Common Language -- Chapter 8 Between Private Signification and Common Use: Locke on Ideas, Words, and the Social Dimension of Language -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary "In this book Lodi Nauta offers the first comprehensive examination of a vital issue in the rivalry between Renaissance humanists and medieval philosophers which still has considerable resonance in modern academe: the advantages and disadvantages that accrue to philosophy from employing a special technical vocabulary to discuss philosophical problems. In the middle ages philosophy had become a highly technical discipline, with its own vocabulary and methods. The humanist critique of this technical language has often been dismissed as purely literary and philosophically superficial, but Nauta shows that it makes a philosophically important point: philosophical problems arise from a misuse of language. Nauta goes on to charts the influence of this critique on early-modern philosophers such as Hobbes and Locke. In showing the crucial role of language critique in the downfall of medieval Aristotelianism, this book will be valuable for any historian interested in the transition from medieval to modern philosophy"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on September 24, 2021)
Subject Philosophy -- Terminology
Philosophy -- Language
Philosophy, Medieval.
Philosophy, Modern.
Language and languages -- Philosophy.
Language and languages -- Philosophy
Philosophy -- Language
Philosophy, Medieval
Philosophy, Modern
Philosophy -- Terminology
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2020052326
ISBN 9781108991476
1108991475