Contexts of Utterance and Evaluation in Peter of Mantua’s Obligationes

image of Vivarium
Brill
  • Buy this article

    • download Price $30.00 + Tax (if applicable)

In this paper I will examine the relation between the theory of obligations and its use in sophismatic contexts through the lens of certain pragmatic concerns. In order to do this, I will take a sophism discussed by Peter of Mantua in his treatise on obligations as a case-study. I will first provide a brief outline of the structure of the treatise and then examine a concrete case that shows how the relationship between background assumptions (casus and context of utterance) and criteria of response seems to suggest a way to qualify the application of general rules (especially for irrelevant sentences) in certain limit-cases. By discussing Peter’s presentation of the sophism, I will also argue for a connection between Peter of Mantua’s text and Mesino de Codronchi’s Questiones on the De Interpretatione.

Affiliations: 1: Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa

Sign-in

Can't access your account?
  • Key

  • Full access
  • Open Access
  • No access (Payment required)
BrillOnline Reference Works
BrillOnline Bibliographies