Memory and Recollection in the Aristotelian Tradition

Essays on the Reception of Aristotle’s De memoria et reminiscentia
Illustration
Couverture livre
Auteur
V. Decaix, C. Thomsen Thörnqvist (eds.)
Date de parution
2022
Lieu d'édition
Turnhout
Prix éditeur
80.00€
Langue
Anglais
Numéro dans la collection
47
Collection / Revue
Collections
Appartient à la collection/revue
ISBN
978-2-503-59312-8
ISSN
2032-1252
Descriptif matériel
266 p., 156 × 234 mm

Aristotle’s De memoria et reminiscentia (“On Memory and Recollection”) is the oldest surviving systematic study of the nature of human memory. Aristotle’s De memoria et reminiscentia (“On Memory and Recollection”) is the oldest surviving systematic study of the nature of human memory.

Forming part of Aristotle’s other minor writings on psychology that were intended as a supplement to his De anima (“On the Soul”) and known under the collective title Parva naturalia, Aristotle’s De memoria et reminiscentia gave rise to a vast number of commentaries in the Middle Ages. The present volume offers new knowledge on the medieval understanding of Aristotle’s theories on memory and recollection across the linguistic traditions including the Byzantine Greek, Latin and Arabic reception.

Véronique Decaix is associate professor in Medieval Philosophy at the University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Her research focus is on psychology during the Middle Ages, more precisely on intentionality in cognitive processes such as sensation, memory, dream and intellection. She has recently published a monograph on Dietrich of Freiberg (Vrin, 2021).

Christina Thomsen Thörnqvist is professor of Latin (University of Gothenburg) and specializes on the Latin reception of Aristotle’s syllogistic theory and his natural philosophy. She has recently led a major research project on the Greek, Latin and Arabic reception of Aristotle’s Parva naturalia (Representation and Reality 2013-2019) and is now heading a project on the medieval reception of Aristotle's logic (Filling the Gap: Medieval Aristotelian Logic 1240–1360, 2019–2024).