Walter Burley

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Walter Burley (or Burleigh), c.1275-1344/5, was a medieval English logician. He was a Master of Arts at Oxford in 1301, and a fellow of Merton College, Oxford until 1305. He studied theology in Paris from before 1310, and by c.1320 he was a doctor of theology at Paris. He was a fellow of the Sorbonne by 1324.

[edit] Works

His main work was the De Puritate Artis Logicae Tractatus Longior, in which he covers such topics as the truth conditions for complex sentences, both truth-functional and modal, as well as providing rules of inferences for different types of inferences. He was one of the first logicians to recognize the priority of the propositional calculus over the predicate calculus, despite the fact that the latter had been the main focus of logicians up until this period.

Other works include:

  • Treatise on Suppositions
  • In Aristotelis Perihermenias (Questions on Aristotle's Perihermenias, 1301)

[edit] References

  • Broadie, Alexander. Introduction to Medieval Logic (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993).
  • Walter Burley. De Puritate Artis Logicae Tractatus Longior, with a revised edition of the Tractatus Brevior, ed. P. Boehner (New York: 1955).

[edit] External links

Persondata
NAME Burley, Walter
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Burlaeus, Gualterus; Gualterus Burlaeus; Burleigh, Walter; Gualterius Burleus Anglicus
SHORT DESCRIPTION English logician
DATE OF BIRTH 1275
PLACE OF BIRTH Burley-in-Wharfedale, Yorkshire
DATE OF DEATH 1344/1345
PLACE OF DEATH
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