Paolo da Pergola
Paolo da Pergola[1] (muere en 1455, en Venecia) fue un matemático y filósofo humanista italiano de la lógica Occamista[2] y pupilo del teólogo Pablo de Venecia.[3]
Sus más importantes obras filosóficas son:
La Iglesia de San Giovanni Elemosinario de Venezia tiene un monumento dedicado al filósofo.
Véase también
editarReferencias
editar- ↑ Paolo della Pergola, Paul of Pergula, Paul of Pergola, Paulus Pergulensis or Pergolensis, Paulus de Pergula
- ↑ Ennio De Bellis, Nicoletto Vernia e Agostino Nifo: aspetti storiografici e metodologici, Congedo, 2003, p. 9.
- ↑ [1]: He became the first publicly paid lecturer in philosophy in Venice, where he was officially honored in a public ceremony. In 1448, he was offered a bishopric, which he refused, and at the end of his life he accepted the administration of the Church of Saint John Almoner.
- ↑ Printed by 1494; it shares a title with a work of William of Heytesbury.
- ↑ Compendium logicae printed by Erhard Ratdolt in 1481; later in Venice as Compendium logicae; De sensu composito et diviso (1498); as Logica Magistri Pauli Pergolensis. 1510.[2] His Dubia was printed in 1477.