Oxford, Clarendon Press 2001 vii + 174pp., 23cm., hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, VG
Reference : F66613
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, Brepols, 2021 Hardback, 266 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Language(s):English, French. ISBN 9782503593128.
Summary 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. TABLE OF CONTENTS Christina Thomsen Th rnqvist, Preface V ronique Decaix, Introduction Mika Per l , Aristotle's Three Questions about Memory Alexandra Michalewski, Writing in the Soul. On Some Aspects of Recollection in Plotinus Tommaso Alpina, Retaining, Remembering, Recollecting. Avicenna's Account of Memory and Its Sources Carla Di Martino, M moire, repr sentation et signification chez Averro s. Une proposition de lecture Jo l Chandelier, Memory, Avicenna and the Western Medical Tradition Julie Brumberg-Chaumont, The First Latin Reception of the De memoria et reminiscentia: Memory and Recollection as Apprehensive Faculties or as Moving Faculties? V ronique Decaix, What Is Memory of? Albert the Great on the Proper Object of Memory Sten Ebbesen, Memory Is of the Past Christina Thomsen Th rnqvist, Aristotle and His Early Latin Commentators on Memory and Motion in Sleep Dafni Argyri, The Byzantine Reception of Aristotle's De memoria Bibliography Index