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Allan Bäck

Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
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  •  Publications
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 More details
  • Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Homepage
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
History of Western Philosophy
Other Academic Areas
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics and Epistemology
History of Western Philosophy
Other Academic Areas
Philosophy, Misc
  • All publications (61)
  •  18
    Grasping the Quiddities
    In Jack P. Cunningham, Adam Foxon & Rosamund M. Gammie (eds.), Mind, Soul and the Cosmos in the High Middle Ages, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 155-178. 2024.
    Aristotelian science consists in demonstrations from its first principles, the axioms and definitions. For Avicenna, like Aristotle, a definition gives ‘a formula of the essence’ or quiddity. Avicenna recognizes quiddities in three respects: in themselves, in re, and in intellectu. He grounds definitions on quiddities in themselves. Yet how are we to grasp these quiddities so as to get at the definitions? This chapter summarizes Avicenna’s threefold distinction of quiddity (triplex status natura…Read more
    Aristotelian science consists in demonstrations from its first principles, the axioms and definitions. For Avicenna, like Aristotle, a definition gives ‘a formula of the essence’ or quiddity. Avicenna recognizes quiddities in three respects: in themselves, in re, and in intellectu. He grounds definitions on quiddities in themselves. Yet how are we to grasp these quiddities so as to get at the definitions? This chapter summarizes Avicenna’s threefold distinction of quiddity (triplex status naturae), as well as his recognition of both intelligible and perceptible individuals. It will then give an account of how Avicenna thinks that we can come to grasp quiddities in themselves.
  •  14
    The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Logic: edited by Luca Castagnoli and Paolo Fair, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2023, 432 pp., £74.99 (hardback), ISBN 9781107062948; £26.99 (paperback), ISBN 9781107656772; $34.99 (ebook), ISBN 9781009302555 (review)
    History and Philosophy of Logic 46 (2): 320-323. 2025.
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  •  36
    Nonexistent Objects: The Avicenna Transform
    Open Philosophy 8 (1): 125-45. 2025.
    My general concern is how to translate modern formal semantics into medieval metaphysics, itself a theory about objects. I shall use the formal model in Nonexistent Objects by Terence Parsons as a test case for the modern formal system, and the philosophy of Avicenna as one for medieval metaphysics. My investigation has four parts: 1) a summary of Avicenna’s general metaphysical scheme, the threefold distinction of quiddity; 2) translating Parsons’s theory into medieval terms; 3) the location of…Read more
    My general concern is how to translate modern formal semantics into medieval metaphysics, itself a theory about objects. I shall use the formal model in Nonexistent Objects by Terence Parsons as a test case for the modern formal system, and the philosophy of Avicenna as one for medieval metaphysics. My investigation has four parts: 1) a summary of Avicenna’s general metaphysical scheme, the threefold distinction of quiddity; 2) translating Parsons’s theory into medieval terms; 3) the location of nonexistent objects of various sorts in Avicenna’s theory; and 4) comparing the theories of Parsons, and concluding that the theories of Parsons and Avicenna are not incommensurate paradigms as Parsons suggests. Rather, they are different theories but under the same research tradition.
  •  95
    The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Logic
    History and Philosophy of Logic 46 (2): 320-323. 2025.
    The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Logic is a well-constructed resource on the current state of research in ancient logic, stronger on some topics than on others. The scholars writing in this Compa...
    Logic and Philosophy of Logic
  • The Theory of Reduplication
    Dissertation, The University of Texas at Austin. 1979.
  •  47
    Al-Madkhal: Avicenna on the Isagoge of Porphyry
    with Avicenna /. Ibn Avicenna / Ibn Sīnā
    Philosophia. 2019.
    Neoplatonists
  •  47
    The Triplex Status Naturae and its Justification
    In Ignacio Angelelli & María Cerezo (eds.), Studies on the History of Logic: Proceedings of the III. Symposium on the History of Logic, De Gruyter. pp. 133-154. 1996.
  •  51
    La doctrine Leibnizienne de la vérité (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 56 (3): 672-672. 2003.
    Jean-Baptiste Rauzy writes here on Leibniz’s theory of truth, construed broadly, mostly in Leibniz’s earlier periods. He focuses mostly on Leibniz’s logical theory, particularly as given in the logical papers, published only with Couturat and others, in 1901 and following. Unlike a lot of the secondary literature, Rauzy’s book gives much detail about how Leibniz’s various logical models work out and apply to more general issues such as the reduction of relations, the ontological square, haecceit…Read more
    Jean-Baptiste Rauzy writes here on Leibniz’s theory of truth, construed broadly, mostly in Leibniz’s earlier periods. He focuses mostly on Leibniz’s logical theory, particularly as given in the logical papers, published only with Couturat and others, in 1901 and following. Unlike a lot of the secondary literature, Rauzy’s book gives much detail about how Leibniz’s various logical models work out and apply to more general issues such as the reduction of relations, the ontological square, haecceity, and the problem of universals.
    Leibniz: Epistemology
  •  67
    On Aristotle's On Interpretation 1-8
    Review of Metaphysics 50 (2): 384-385. 1996.
    This volume forms part of the translation series, The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle, with Richard Sorabji as General Editor. This series consists of English translations of parts of the Commentaria in Aristotelis Graeca. Like its companion volumes, the translation includes an introduction, the series introduction, and indices, including one from Greek to the English translations used. The book is well-produced with few typos, although I wonder a bit at not using the Greek font instead of Rom…Read more
    This volume forms part of the translation series, The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle, with Richard Sorabji as General Editor. This series consists of English translations of parts of the Commentaria in Aristotelis Graeca. Like its companion volumes, the translation includes an introduction, the series introduction, and indices, including one from Greek to the English translations used. The book is well-produced with few typos, although I wonder a bit at not using the Greek font instead of Romanizing it.
    Ammonius
  •  909
    Insights of Avicenna
    In Alfredo Carlos Storck (ed.), Aristotelis analytica posteriora: estudos acerca da recepcao medieval dos segundos analiticos, Linus Editores. pp. 111-148. 2009.
  •  5
    The formal Structure of Scotus' Formal Distinction
    In I. Angelelli & P. Pérez-Ilzarbe (eds.), Medieval and Renaissance Logic in Spain, G. Olms. pp. 54--411. 2000.
    John Duns Scotus
  •  743
    Islamic Logic
    In Shahid Rahman, Tony Street & Hassan Tahiri (eds.), The Unity of Science in the Islamic Tradition, Hal Ccsd. 2008.
  •  1456
    The Ki to Strength in the Martial Arts
    In M. Holowchak & Terry Todd (eds.), Philosophical Reflections on Physical Strength, Mellen Press. pp. 91-114. 2010.
  •  673
    Qua-lification
  •  1358
    Two Aristotelian Theories of Existential Import
    Aportía 2 4-24. 2011.
  •  702
    Avicenna the Commentator
    In Lloyd Newton (ed.), Medieval commentaries on Aristotle's Categories, Brill. pp. 31-71. 2008.
  •  126
    F. W. Zimmermann, "Al-Farabi's Commentary and Short Treatise on Aristotle's De Interpretatione" (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (3): 396. 1983.
    History of Western PhilosophyAl-FarabiAristotle: Logic and Philosophy of LanguageMedieval Philosophy…Read more
    History of Western PhilosophyAl-FarabiAristotle: Logic and Philosophy of LanguageMedieval Philosophy of Language
  •  1
    MICHAEL V. WEDIN Aristotle's theory of substance
    History and Philosophy of Logic 22 (1): 43-46. 2001.
    Logic and Philosophy of LogicAristotle: Logic and Philosophy of Language
  •  33
    Imagination in Avicenna and Kant
    Tópicos: Revista de Filosofía 29 (1): 101-130. 2005.
    Al comparar la visión de Avicena y Kant sobre la imaginación, encontramos una sorprendente congruencia en sus doctrinas. Las doctrinas de Kant sobre la síntesis de la imaginación en su Deducción Trascendental tiene notables similitudes con la visión de Avicena. Tanto para Avicena como para Kant, la imaginación sirve para conectar lo fenoménico con lo nouménico. Al menos esta comparación tiene el doble uso de colocar las doctrinas de Kant en el contexto de la tradición aristotélica y de iluminar …Read more
    Al comparar la visión de Avicena y Kant sobre la imaginación, encontramos una sorprendente congruencia en sus doctrinas. Las doctrinas de Kant sobre la síntesis de la imaginación en su Deducción Trascendental tiene notables similitudes con la visión de Avicena. Tanto para Avicena como para Kant, la imaginación sirve para conectar lo fenoménico con lo nouménico. Al menos esta comparación tiene el doble uso de colocar las doctrinas de Kant en el contexto de la tradición aristotélica y de iluminar la importancia moderna que tiene el pensamiento de Avicena. Dado que el pensamiento de Kant nos es más familiar que el de Avicena, podemos usar a Kant también para ayudar a comprender las tesis de Avicena. Por otro lado, esta comparación puede ayudar a sostener la tesis de que la comprensión de Kant yace en gran medida en sus raíces medievales y post-medievales —tal como ocurre con Copérnico, que, en su propia “Revolución Copernicana”, seguía ciertas tradiciones anteriores.
  •  114
    The Role of Qualification
    Journal of Philosophical Research 27 159-171. 2002.
    I give an analysis of the logical structure of statements describing duties in social roles. Role terms like ‘doctor’ should not be treated as simple predicates, as natural kind terms, like ‘human being’, are. When role terms are treated as simple predicates, fallacies may result. Rather, treat role terms (M) as complex predicates with a simple subject, a person (S), as a base; ‘S qua M’, and then analyze their reduplicative structure. I illustrate and support this analysis by considering sophis…Read more
    I give an analysis of the logical structure of statements describing duties in social roles. Role terms like ‘doctor’ should not be treated as simple predicates, as natural kind terms, like ‘human being’, are. When role terms are treated as simple predicates, fallacies may result. Rather, treat role terms (M) as complex predicates with a simple subject, a person (S), as a base; ‘S qua M’, and then analyze their reduplicative structure. I illustrate and support this analysis by considering sophisms, traditionally known as committing the fallacy of secundum quid et simpliciter, about conflicts of duties in different roles. I end with some remarks about personal integrity.
    Semantics
  •  34
    Book reviews (review)
    with Paul R. Goldin, Wu Jiang, Sor-Hoon Tan, Bongrae Seok, Ma Lin, Zhu Wei, Xie Wenyu, Xing Wen, Zong Desheng, Jay Goulding, and Zhou Lian
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 4 (1): 167-202. 2004.
  •  108
    The Way to Virtue in Sport
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 36 (2): 217-237. 2009.
    No abstract.
    Philosophy of Sport
  •  123
    Thinking clearly about violence
    Philosophical Studies 117 (1-2): 219-230. 2004.
  •  84
    Wouter Goris, Transzendentale Einheit. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2015. Pp. ix, 527. $210. ISBN: 978-90-04-30511-3
    Speculum 92 (2): 530-532. 2017.
  • The Metaphysics of the Incarnation: Thomas Aquinas to Duns Scotus, by Richard Cross (review)
    Ars Disputandi 3. 2003.
  •  63
    What is being qua being?
    Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 82 (1): 37-58. 2004.
    I offer truth conditions for propositions about being qua being in Aristotle's philosophy. I show that in general Aristotle views expressions of the form "qua S" in "S qua S is P" (or "S is P qua S") as making a claim not about the subject "S", but about the predication of "P" of "S". I develop necessary and sufficient truth conditions for propositions of the form "S qua S is P". Finally, I show how this analysis satisfactorily covers what Aristotle says about being qua being in the Metaphysics.
    Aristotle: Logic and Philosophy of Language
  •  131
    The Paper World of Bernard Suits
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 35 (2): 156-174. 2008.
    No abstract.
    Philosophy of SportGames
  • Themes in Neoplatonic and Aristotelian Logic, by John N. Martin (review)
    Ars Disputandi 5. 2005.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  133
    Towards A Western Philosophy of the Eastern Martial Arts
    with Daeshik Kim
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 6 (1): 19-28. 1979.
    Philosophy of Sport
  •  1
    The Cambridge Companion To Medieval Jewish Philosophy, edited by Daniel H. Frank and Oliver Leaman (review)
    Ars Disputandi 4. 2004.
    Philosophy of ReligionJudaism
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