Videos

Title
University of Pennsylvania Library's LJS 56 - Logica parva (Video Orientation)
Files
Date of this Version
8-2014
See More at Penn in Hand
Disciplines
History | Medieval Studies | Other Arts and Humanities
Recommended Citation
Porter, D. (2014, August 01). University of Pennsylvania Library's LJS 56 - Logica parva (Video Orientation). [Video file.] Retrieved from https://repository.upenn.edu/sims_video/37

Comments
Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library's LJS 56 - Logica parva, by Veneto Paolo.
Summary:
Padua, Italy, 1420. Compendium by the author of his own Logica magna, a presentation of terminist logic, including consideration of propositions and relationships between propositions and meaning. This early copy of this text was completed by the German Carmelite Johannes de Beylario, who was from Cologne and studied philosophy and theology in Padua, during the author's tenure in Padua. Later in the century the Logica parva became a required element of the curriculum at Padua, Venice, and Ferrara.