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Jon McGinnis

University of Missouri, St. Louis
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    64
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 More details
  • University of Missouri, St. Louis
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
University of Pennsylvania
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2000
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
History of Western Philosophy, Misc
Areas of Interest
History of Western Philosophy, Misc
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
  • All publications (64)
  •  78
    A Small Discovery: Avicenna’s Theory of Minima Naturalia
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (1): 1-24. 2015.
    History of Western PhilosophyAvicenna
  •  133
    Tony Roark , Aristotle on Time: A Study of the Physics . Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 32 (6): 518-520. 2012.
    Aristotle: Time
  •  100
    Aristoteles' "De Anima": Eine verlorene spätantike Paraphrase in arabischer und persischer Überlieferung. Rüdiger Arnzen
    Isis 92 (2): 381-382. 2001.
    History of Science
  •  283
    Scientific Methodologies in Medieval Islam
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 41 (3): 307-327. 2003.
    : The present study considers Ibn Sînâ's (Lat. Avicenna) account of induction (istiqra') and experimentation (tajriba). For Ibn Sînâ induction purportedly provided the absolute, necessary and certain first principles of a science. Ibn Sînâ criticized induction, arguing that it can neither guarantee the necessity nor provide the primitiveness required of first principles. In it place, Ibn Sînâ developed a theory of experimentation, which avoids the pitfalls of induction by not providing absolute,…Read more
    : The present study considers Ibn Sînâ's (Lat. Avicenna) account of induction (istiqra') and experimentation (tajriba). For Ibn Sînâ induction purportedly provided the absolute, necessary and certain first principles of a science. Ibn Sînâ criticized induction, arguing that it can neither guarantee the necessity nor provide the primitiveness required of first principles. In it place, Ibn Sînâ developed a theory of experimentation, which avoids the pitfalls of induction by not providing absolute, but conditional, necessary and certain first principles. The theory of experimentation that emerges though not modern, does have elements that are similar to a modern conception of scientific method
    History of Western PhilosophyAvicenna
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