Margaret Cameron and Robert Stainton: Introduction
1: Deborah Modrak: Method, Meaning, and Ontology in Plato's
Philosophy of Language
2: Francesco Ademollo: Names, Verbs, and Sentences in Ancient Greek
Philosophy
3: Margaret Cameron: On what is said: the Stoics and Peter
Abelard
4: Peter Adamson and Alexander Key: Philosophy of Language in the
Medieval Arabic Tradition
5: Joke Spruyt and Catarina Dutilh Novaes: Those 'funny words':
medieval theories of syncategorematic terms
6: Gyula Klima: Semantic Content in Aquinas and Ockham
7: Lodi Nauta: Meaning and Linguistic Usage in Renaissance
Humanism: The case of Valla
8: E. Jennifer Ashworth: Medieval Theories of Signification to John
Locke
9: Benjamin Hill: Locke on the Names of Modes
10: Michael Forster: Herder's Doctrine of Meaning as Use
11: Patrick Rysiew: Thomas Reid on Language
12: Laurent Cesalli: 'Meaning in Action': Anton Marty's Pragmatic
Semantics
Margaret Cameron completed her PhD in the Collaborative Program in
Ancient and Medieval Philosophy at the University of Toronto in
2005. She is currently Associate Professor and Canada Research
Chair in the Aristotelian Tradition at the University of
Victoria.
Robert Stainton first studied Philosophy and Linguistics as an
undergraduate in his home town of Toronto, at Glendon College, part
of York University. He completed the Ph.D. at MIT in 1993, and took
up his first academic job at Carleton University in Ottawa, where
he was Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Science. Presently he is
Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Philosophy
at the University of Western Ontario in London.
I recommend this volume and hope that it will spur further research
into what has been, until very recently, the invisible history of
the philosophy language.
*Walter Ott, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Online*
Fascinating collection
*Max Rabie, Australasian Journal of Philosophy.*
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