Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/002465970/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b3556679.
- catalog created "1992.".
- catalog date "1992".
- catalog date "1992.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1992.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 615-637) and index.".
- catalog description "pt. 1. The critical texts of antiquity: 1. Plato -- 2. Aristotle -- 3. Cicero -- 4. Pliny and Roman naturalists on memory; Borges's Funes the Memorious -- 5. Plotinus and the early neo-Platonists on memory and mind -- 6. Augustine: the early works -- 7. Augustine's De Trinitate: on memory, time and the presentness of the past -- pt. 2. The practice of memory during the period of transition from classical antiquity to the Christian monastic centuries: 8. The early monastic practice of memory: Gregory the Great; Benedict and his rule -- 9. Bede, monastic grammatica and reminiscence -- 10. Monastic memory in service of oblivion -- 11. Cistercian 'blanched' memory and St. Bernard: the associative, textual memory and the purified past -- 12. Twelfth-century Cistercians: the Boethian legacy and the physiological issues in Greco-Arabic medical writings -- pt. 3. The beginnings of the scholastic understanding of memory: 13. Abelard -- 14. Memory and its uses: the relationship between a theory of memory and twelfth-century historiography -- pt. 4. Aristotle neo-Platonised: the revival of Aristotle and the development of scholastic theories of memory: 15. Arabic and Jewish translations of sources from antiquity: their use by Latin Christians -- 16. John Blund, David of Dinant, the De potentiis animae et obiectis -- 17. John of La Rochelle -- 18. Averroes -- 19. Albert the Great -- 20. Thomas Aquinas -- pt. 5. Later medieval theories of memory: the via antiqua and the via moderna: 21. John Duns Scotus -- 22. William of Ockham -- 23. The legacy of the via antiqua and the via moderna in the Renaissance and beyond -- Conclusion: An all too brief account of modern theories of mind and remembering.".
- catalog extent "xx, 646 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0521411440".
- catalog issued "1992".
- catalog issued "1992.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press,".
- catalog subject "930/.072 20".
- catalog subject "D13 .C596 1991".
- catalog subject "D13 .C596 1992".
- catalog subject "Historiography".
- catalog subject "Historiography.".
- catalog subject "History, Ancient Historiography.".
- catalog subject "Memory.".
- catalog subject "Middle Ages Historiography.".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. 1. The critical texts of antiquity: 1. Plato -- 2. Aristotle -- 3. Cicero -- 4. Pliny and Roman naturalists on memory; Borges's Funes the Memorious -- 5. Plotinus and the early neo-Platonists on memory and mind -- 6. Augustine: the early works -- 7. Augustine's De Trinitate: on memory, time and the presentness of the past -- pt. 2. The practice of memory during the period of transition from classical antiquity to the Christian monastic centuries: 8. The early monastic practice of memory: Gregory the Great; Benedict and his rule -- 9. Bede, monastic grammatica and reminiscence -- 10. Monastic memory in service of oblivion -- 11. Cistercian 'blanched' memory and St. Bernard: the associative, textual memory and the purified past -- 12. Twelfth-century Cistercians: the Boethian legacy and the physiological issues in Greco-Arabic medical writings -- pt. 3. The beginnings of the scholastic understanding of memory: 13. Abelard -- 14. Memory and its uses: the relationship between a theory of memory and twelfth-century historiography -- pt. 4. Aristotle neo-Platonised: the revival of Aristotle and the development of scholastic theories of memory: 15. Arabic and Jewish translations of sources from antiquity: their use by Latin Christians -- 16. John Blund, David of Dinant, the De potentiis animae et obiectis -- 17. John of La Rochelle -- 18. Averroes -- 19. Albert the Great -- 20. Thomas Aquinas -- pt. 5. Later medieval theories of memory: the via antiqua and the via moderna: 21. John Duns Scotus -- 22. William of Ockham -- 23. The legacy of the via antiqua and the via moderna in the Renaissance and beyond -- Conclusion: An all too brief account of modern theories of mind and remembering.".
- catalog title "Ancient and medieval memories : studies in the reconstruction of the past / Janet Coleman.".
- catalog type "text".