Paolo da Pergola

Paolo da Pergola[1] (died 1455, in Venice) was an Italian humanist philosopher, mathematician and Occamist[2] logician. He was a pupil of Paul of Venice.[3]

Work

Paolo da Pergola's most important work was probably De sensu composito et diviso.[4] His logical works were printed early.[5]

He taught at the Scuola di Rialto from 1421 to 1454.[6] He was teacher and friend of the glassmaker Antonio Barovier.[7]

Among his pupils was also Nicoletto Vernia, a well known professor of philosophy in Padua.[8]

There is a memorial to him in San Giovanni Elemosinario, Venice.[9]

Works

  • Logica; and, Tractatus de sensu composito et diviso by Paolo della Pergola, edited by Mary Anthony Brown, Saint Bonaventure, New York: Franciscan Institute, 1961.

Notes

  1. Also: Paolo della Pergola, Paolo dalla Pergola, Paul of Pergula, Paul of Pergola, Paulus Pergulensis or Pergolensis, Paulus de Pergula.
  2. Ennio De Bellis, Nicoletto Vernia e Agostino Nifo: aspetti storiografici e metodologici, Congedo, 2003, p. 9.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-06-13. Retrieved 2007-01-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Printed by 1494; it shares a title with a work of William of Heytesbury.
  5. 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. His Dubia was printed in 1477.
  6. (PDF).
  7. PDF.
  8. Avery Robert Dulles, Princeps Concordiae: Pico della Mirandola and the scholastic tradition, Harvard University Press, 1941, p. 29.
  9. San Giovanni Elemosinario Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
gollark: They have always been base 10.
gollark: Wrong.
gollark: Your incorrect use of prefixes means you are 1 "tebicringe" (2^40).
gollark: Those are metric (decimal) prefixes, actually? The binary prefixes are different.
gollark: Just fill up all the land area of France with nuclear power plants and import electricity from there.
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