Directory:Logic Museum/Syncategoremata
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Jump to navigationJump to searchIn medieval logic, syncategoremata are words which are not categorematic: they cannot be used on their own as a subject term or as a predicate term. Syncategorematic terms can occur in a categorical or hypothetical proposition only with at least one matched pair of categorematic words – e.g., only Socrates runs (Solus Socrates currit), Socrates does not run (Socrates non currit).
More than fifty different words were considered in the medieval logicians' treatment of syncategoremata.
Primary sources
- Quaestiones Victorinae 1st half 12th century
- In de Rijk, Logica Modernorum Vol. 2, Assen: Van Gorcum 1967.
- Tractatus de univocatione (ed. de Rijk) 3rd quarter 12th century
- Ars Emmerana (ed. de Rijk) 3rd quarter 12th century
- Ars Meliduna (ed. de Rijk) 1170/80
- Syncategoremata Monacensia (ed. Braakhuis) 4th quarter 12th century
- Tractatus implicitarum end of 12th century
- Dialectia Monacensis (ed. de Rijk) 4th quarter 12th century
- Tractatus Anagnini (ed. de Rijk) 1st decades 13th century
- Robert Bacon Syncategoremata (ed. Braakhuis) 1200/1210
- John le Page Syncategoremata (ed. Braakhuis) 1220/1230
- Richard the Sophister Abstractiones 1220/1230?
- Peter of Spain Tractatus (ed. de Rijk) 1230/1240
- Peter of Spain Syncategoremata (ed. Braakhuis) 1230/1240
- William of Sherwood Syncategoremata (ed. O'Donnell) 1230/1240
- Sophismata logicalia after 1230
- Nicholas of Paris Summe Metenses (exc. de Rijk) c. 1250
- Nicholas of Paris Syncategoremata (ed. de Rijk) c. 1250
- Quoniam ignoratis communibus (exc. Grabmann) c. 1250
References
- Kretzmann, Norman. "Syncategoremata, exponibilia, sophismata." Directory:Logic Museum/The Cambridge History of Later Medieval Philosophy