- to
Bernard of Chartres,
first appears in
written form in the
Metalogicon. The
Metalogicon consists of four
books starting with
defending the
trivium and...
- with Aristotle.
Fragments of
these treatises are to be
found in John's
Metalogicon (IV, 35) and
Policraticus (VII, 3). Hauréau
confounds Bernard of Chartres...
- (1159).
Metalogicon.
folio 217
recto (f 217r).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint:
location (link) MacGarry,
Daniel Doyle, ed. (1955). The
Metalogicon of John Salisbury:...
- ISBN 978-0-521-63563-9. Salisbury, John of (1929). Webb,
Clemens C.I. (ed.).
Metalogicon 2.17. Oxford. p. 92. Panaccio, Claude; Spade, Paul
Vincent (2015). "William...
-
Publishing Science "Curriculum
Vitae of Jan Łukasiewicz", Rome, Italy:
Metalogicon journal, (1994) VII, 2 (July–December issue). Craig,
Edward (general...
-
Ethiopian Monarchy Website. "Ge'ez language".
Encyclopedia Britannica. *
Metalogicon,
Volumes 12-13. L.E.R. 1999. p. 36. *Ullendorf,
Edward (1955). The Semitic...
- of Chartres,
handed down by John of
Salisbury in
colophon 400 of his
Metalogicon - "Bernard of
Chartres said that we are like
dwarves perched on the shoulders...
-
secretary that he
wrote his two most
famous works, the
Policraticus and the
Metalogicon.
Others who
studied for a time in Theobald's
household were
Roger de...
-
arrived in Rome
making his
arrival there around March 1155. In his 1159
Metalogicon, John of
Salisbury states that on the
occasion of his
visit to Adrian...
- 25,
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 2011. His
writings are lost, see: The
Metalogicon of John Salisbury. A Twelfth-Century
Defense of the
Verbal and Logical...