Mental Language: From Plato to William of Ockham
Claude Panaccio
et al.
Published:
2017
Online ISBN:
9780823272648
Print ISBN:
9780823272600
Contents
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A Stoic notion? A Stoic notion?
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Philo and allegorical exegesis Philo and allegorical exegesis
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From plutarch to plotinus From plutarch to plotinus
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John Damascene and his sources John Damascene and his sources
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Cite
Panaccio, Claude, Joshua P. Hochschild, and Meredith K. Ziebart, 'Logos Endiathetos', in Joshua P. Hochschild, and Meredith K. Ziebart (eds), Mental Language: From Plato to William of Ockham, Medieval Philosophy: Texts and Studies (FUP) (New York, NY , 2017; online edn, Fordham Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2017), https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823272600.003.0003, accessed 18 Apr. 2024.
Abstract
A distinction between logos endiathetos (internal discourse) and logos prophorikos(uttered discourse) was widely accepted in later Greek philosophy and contrary to what is often believed, nothing indicates that it was of specifically Stoic origin. Its occurrence and significance is studied in various authors of the first three centuries A.D. (especially Philo of Alexandria), as well as in the Greek theologian John Damascene. An intriguing theory of the ‘five movements of the soul’ is introduced and discussed.
Subject
Ancient Philosophy
Translators:
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