""Liber De Sex Principiis Gilberto Porretano Ascriptus"" is a seminal work of medieval scholastic logic and philosophy. Traditionally attributed to the 12th-century theologian and philosopher Gilbert of Poitiers, this treatise serves as an essential companion to Aristotle's ""Categories"". While Aristotle's primary work focused heavily on the first four categories, this text provides an in-depth analysis of the remaining six: action, passion, time, place, position, and state (principia). By expanding upon these often-overlooked dimensions of reality, the work helped shape the structural framework of Western ontological thought for centuries.
Edited by Albanus Heysse, this volume presents the philosophical inquiry into how entities relate to their environment and the temporal world. The text reflects the rigorous dialectical methods of the Middle Ages and highlights the intellectual bridge between classical antiquity and the flowering of scholasticism. As a core component of the medieval university curriculum, ""Liber De Sex Principiis"" remains a vital resource for scholars of the history of logic, medieval theology, and the evolution of Aristotelian commentary. This work offers a profound window into the analytical precision that defined the intellectual life of the 12th century.
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