Difference between revisions of "Thomas of Erfurt"

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday March 28, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 37: Line 37:
  
 
Thomas's entire reputation derives from ''De modis significandi'', which remains his only work to have been studied in any detail.
 
Thomas's entire reputation derives from ''De modis significandi'', which remains his only work to have been studied in any detail.
 
 
De grammatica speculativa (Tractatus de modi significandi, Tractatus de modis significandi sive grammatica speculativa)
 
  
 
==Secondary sources ==
 
==Secondary sources ==

Revision as of 16:17, 20 December 2008

Thomas Erfurt
Born
Lavingen
Died
Erfurt, Germany
unknown
Occupation Philosopher
Contact {{{contact}}}


Thomas of Erfurt (Thomas Erfordiensis, Thomas de Erfordia, Thomas von Erfurt).

Life

Work

Influence

Primary sources

Six works have been attributed to Thomas of Erfurt.

  • Tractatus de modis significandi seu Grammatica speculativa (ed. Bursill-Hall 1972),
  • Expositio Porphyrii (? Manuscript)
  • Expositio super libros Praedicamentorum (? Manuscript)
  • Expositio super librum Perihermenias (? Manuscript)
  • Expositio VI Principiorum (? Manuscript)
  • Commentarius in carmen ‘Fundamentum puerorum’ (ed. Gansiniec 1960), although its editor believes that it is actually an anonymous abridgement of De modis significandi.

Thomas's entire reputation derives from De modis significandi, which remains his only work to have been studied in any detail.

Secondary sources

Links

Notability

This philosopher has 1 pages in the Blackwell Companion.