Note On Buridan's Sophismata 8.4

  • Mark Owen Webb Appalachian State University
Keywords: Logic, Paradox, Language, Buridan, Theory of propositions

Abstract

John Buridan’s Sophismata chapter eight is a well-known and heroic attempt to deal with the problems of propositions that are paradoxical because of self-reference. In the midst of his discussion of such propositions (discussion which includes the famous “liar” paradox), we find sophisma 4, the proposition ‘I say that a man is a donkey’. The question is whether a person uttering that proposition says something true or something false. Buridan seems to come to exactly the wrong conclusion about the solution to this sophisma, and it is a bit of a puzzle why. The answer is that his own theory of propositions invited him to slip back and forth between two interpretations of the sophisma.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Published
1994-07-04
How to Cite
Webb, M. O. (1994). Note On Buridan’s Sophismata 8.4. Patristica Et Mediævalia, 15, 39-44. Retrieved from http://revistascientificas.filo.uba.ar/index.php/petm/article/view/8769
Section
Critical Notes