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This innovative volume investigates the meaning of 'something' in
different recent philosophical traditions in order to rethink the
logic and the unity of ontology, without forgetting to compare
these views to earlier significative accounts in the history of
philosophy. In fact, the revival of interest in "something" in the
19th and 20th centuries as well as in contemporary philosophy can
easily be accounted for: it affords the possibility for asking the
question: what is there? without engaging in predefined speculative
assumptions The issue about "something" seems to avoid any naive
approach to the question about what there is, so that it is treated
in two main contemporary philosophical trends: "material ontology",
which aims at taking "inventory" of what there is, of everything
that is; and "formal ontology", which analyses the structural
features of all there is, whatever it is. The volume advances
cutting-edge debates on what is the first et the most general item
in ontology, that is to say "something", because the relevant
features of the conceptual core of something are: non-nothingness,
otherness. Something means that one being is different from others.
The relationality belongs to something.: Therefore, the volume
advances cutting-edge debates in phenomenology, analytic
philosophy, formal and material ontology, traditional metaphysics.
While philosophy even up until Newton described scientific effort,
in the Early Modern Age philology was understood in very different
ways: as universal knowledge of all that is conveyed by language,
but also as technical analysis of written documents or as
collection of knowledge in the form of an encyclopedia. This book
attempts to illuminate the different aspects in more detail. In
order to understand the significance and consequences of the
philologization of our cultural history, one should first focus on
the intellectual gesture of which philology bears witness, such as
the development of critical activity ."
The Legacy of Aristotelian Enthymeme provides a historical-logical
analysis of Aristotle's rhetorical syllogism, the enthymeme,
through its Medieval and Renaissance interpretations. Bringing
together notions of credibility and proof, an international team of
scholars highlight the fierce debates around this form of
argumentation during two key periods for Aristotle's beliefs.
Reflecting on medieval and humanist thinkers, philosophers, poets
and theologians, this volume joins up dialectical and rhetorical
argumentation as key to the enthymeme's interpretation and shows
how the enthymeme was the source of a major interpretive conflict.
As a method for achieving the standards for proof and credibility
that persist across diverse fields of study today including the
law, politics, medicine and morality, this book takes in Latin and
Persian interpretations of the enthymeme and casts contemporary
argumentation in a new historical light.
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