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- Theory_of_obligationes abstract "Obligationes or disputations de obligationibus were a medieval disputation format common in the 13th and 14th centuries, which had nothing to do with ethics or morals but rather with logical formalisms. The name comes from the fact that the participants were \"obliged\" to follow the rules. Several styles of disputations de obligationibus were distinguished in the medieval literature with the most widely studied being called \"positio\" (positing). \"Obligational\" disputations resemble recent theories of counterfactual reasoning and are believed to precede the modern practice of the academic \"thesis defense.\" Obligationes also resembles a stylized, highly formalized, version of Socratic dialogues and precede other more modern dialogical accounts of logic such as Lorenzen games, Hintikka games and game semantics.William of Ockham said Obligationes:...consists of this that in the beginning some proposition has to be posited, and then propositions have to be proposed as pleases the opponent, and to these the respondent has to answer by granting or denying or doubting or distinguishing. When these answers are given, the opponent, when it pleases him, has to say: “time is finished”. This is, the time of the obligation is finished. And then it is seen whether the respondent has answered well or not.".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageExternalLink obbib.pdf.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageID "28602623".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageLength "2582".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageOutDegree "8".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageRevisionID "676886127".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Disputations.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Game_theory.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophical_logic.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Disputation.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Game_semantics.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Jaakko_Hintikka.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Lorenzen.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLink Socratic_dialogue.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageWikiLinkText "Theory of obligationes".
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Theory_of_obligationes wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sep_entry.
- Theory_of_obligationes subject Category:Disputations.
- Theory_of_obligationes subject Category:Game_theory.
- Theory_of_obligationes subject Category:Philosophical_logic.
- Theory_of_obligationes hypernym Format.
- Theory_of_obligationes type Software.
- Theory_of_obligationes type Redirect.
- Theory_of_obligationes comment "Obligationes or disputations de obligationibus were a medieval disputation format common in the 13th and 14th centuries, which had nothing to do with ethics or morals but rather with logical formalisms. The name comes from the fact that the participants were \"obliged\" to follow the rules. Several styles of disputations de obligationibus were distinguished in the medieval literature with the most widely studied being called \"positio\" (positing).".
- Theory_of_obligationes label "Theory of obligationes".
- Theory_of_obligationes sameAs Q7782444.
- Theory_of_obligationes sameAs m.0czds2m.
- Theory_of_obligationes sameAs Q7782444.
- Theory_of_obligationes wasDerivedFrom Theory_of_obligationes?oldid=676886127.
- Theory_of_obligationes isPrimaryTopicOf Theory_of_obligationes.