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Jack Zupko

University of Alberta
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    103
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  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • University of Alberta
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Cornell University
Sage School of Philosophy
PhD, 1989
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Religion
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
  • All publications (103)
  •  2
    Using Seneca to read Aristotle: the curious methods of Buridan's ethics
    In Jon Miller (ed.), The Reception of Aristotle's Ethics, Cambridge University Press. 2012.
  •  99
    Nicolai oresme expositio et quaestiones in Aristotelis de Anima. [Ed. par] Benoit Patar, edition, étude critique (louvain-la-neuve: Éditions de l'institut superieur de philosophie, 1995; louvain/paris: Éditions Peeters (philosophes médiévaux, tome XXXII), 1995), 180* + 619 pp. 4900 bef isbn 90 6831 668 0 (isp), 2 87723 181 X (Peeters) (review)
    Early Science and Medicine 3 (3): 258-260. 1998.
  •  88
    John Buridan's Tractatus de infinito: Quaestiones super Libros physicorum secundum ultimam lecturam, liber III, quaestiones 14–19 (review)
    Speculum 69 (2): 438-439. 1994.
  •  87
    Freedom of choice in Buridan's moral psychology
    Mediaeval Studies 57 (1): 75-99. 1995.
  •  88
    SHARON M. KAYE AND PAUL THOMSON: On Augustine (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 21 (2): 273-276. 2004.
    AugustinePhilosophy of Religion
  •  77
    Norman Kretzmann
    Bochumer Philosophisches Jahrbuch Fur Antike Und Mittelalter 4 (1): 213-217. 1999.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy13th/14th Century Philosophy
  •  58
    John Buridan
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
    Jean Buridan
  •  50
    Mary J. Gregor 1928-1994
    with William S. Snyder and Allen W. Wood
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 68 (5). 1995.
    Brief biography of Mary Gregor
  •  95
    Weakness of the Will in Medieval Thought: From Augustine to Buridan
    Review of Metaphysics 49 (2): 434-434. 1995.
    This book sketches the history of medieval discussions of the phenomenon Aristotle calls "akrasia". It aims at refuting the widespread prejudice that there was no medieval problem of akrasia because the Christian and Augustinian conception of the will as an autonomous power makes the idea of an agent knowingly acting against reason unproblematic. On the contrary, the author shows that interest in akrasia spanned the Middle Ages, though the parameters of the debate changed after the Nicomachean E…Read more
    This book sketches the history of medieval discussions of the phenomenon Aristotle calls "akrasia". It aims at refuting the widespread prejudice that there was no medieval problem of akrasia because the Christian and Augustinian conception of the will as an autonomous power makes the idea of an agent knowingly acting against reason unproblematic. On the contrary, the author shows that interest in akrasia spanned the Middle Ages, though the parameters of the debate changed after the Nicomachean Ethics became known in the thirteenth century.
    Metaphysics and EpistemologyMotivation and Will
  •  142
    On Buridan's alleged alexandrianism: Heterodoxy and natural philosophy in fourteenth-century Paris
    Vivarium 42 (1): 43-57. 2004.
    BonaventureJean BuridanMedieval Philosophy of Nature
  •  75
    M. J. F. M. Hoenen, "Marsilius of Inghen: Divine Knowledge in Late Medieval Thought" (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 32 (2): 301. 1994.
    History of Western Philosophy13th/14th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  103
    How Are Souls Related to Bodies? A Study of John Buridan
    Review of Metaphysics 46 (3). 1993.
    MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHERS HAD NO SINGLE RESPONSE to the difficult question of how souls are related to the bodies they animate. In this respect, the theory of psychological inherence advanced by the noted Parisian philosopher John Buridan is a case in point. Buridan offers different accounts of the soul-body relation, depending upon which of two main varieties of natural, animate substance he is explaining. In the case of human beings, he defends a version of immanent dualism: the thesis that the so…Read more
    MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHERS HAD NO SINGLE RESPONSE to the difficult question of how souls are related to the bodies they animate. In this respect, the theory of psychological inherence advanced by the noted Parisian philosopher John Buridan is a case in point. Buridan offers different accounts of the soul-body relation, depending upon which of two main varieties of natural, animate substance he is explaining. In the case of human beings, he defends a version of immanent dualism: the thesis that the soul is an immaterial, everlasting, and created entity, actually inhering in each and every body it animates, and thus numerically many. But when his explanandum is the relation between nonhuman animal or plant souls and their bodies, Buridan is a materialist; that is, he regards the sensitive and vegetative souls of such creatures as no more than collections of material, extended powers exhaustively defined by their biological functions, and hence as corruptible as the particular arrangements of matter they happen to animate.
    Metaphysics and EpistemologyJean BuridanPropositional Attitudes
  •  41
    John Buridan: Portrait of a Fourteenth-Century Arts Master
    Notre Dame. 2003.
    John Buridan was the most famous philosophy teacher of his time, and probably the most influential. In this important new book, Jack Zupko offers the first systematic exposition of Buridan's thought to appear in any language. Zupko uses Buridan's own conception of the order and practice of philosophy to depict the most salient features of his thought, beginning with his views on the nature of language and logic and then illustrating their application to a series of topics in metaphysics, natural…Read more
    John Buridan was the most famous philosophy teacher of his time, and probably the most influential. In this important new book, Jack Zupko offers the first systematic exposition of Buridan's thought to appear in any language. Zupko uses Buridan's own conception of the order and practice of philosophy to depict the most salient features of his thought, beginning with his views on the nature of language and logic and then illustrating their application to a series of topics in metaphysics, natural philosophy, and ethics. Part 1 of John Buridan considers the picture of language and logic developed in Buridan's Summulae de dialectica. Buridan systematically overhauled the logic he first learned and later taught at the University of Paris, redeeming the older tradition of Aristotelian logic in terms, propositions, and arguments. This made possible newer and more powerful forms of philosophical discourse. The second part of this volume provides a reading of Buridan's philosophy, showing how this discourse shaped his treatment of speculative questions such as the relation between soul and body, the nature of knowledge, the proper subject of psychology, the function of the.
    Jean Buridan
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