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         Ramus Peter:     more books (25)
  1. Peter Ramus and Educational Reformatic of the Sixteenth Century by Frank Pierrepont Graves, 2009-02-11
  2. Arguments in Rhetoric Against Quintilian: Translation and Text of Peter Ramus's Rhetoricae Distinctiones in Quintilianum (Landmarks in Rhetoric and Public Address) by Peter Ramus, 2010-08-27
  3. Peter Ramus and the educational reformation of the sixteenth century by Frank Pierrepont Graves, 2010-08-06
  4. The Logike 1574 by Peter Ramus, 1966
  5. Ramus, Method, and the Decay of Dialogue: From the Art of Discourse to the art of Reason. offered with: Ramus and Talon Inventory: A Short-title Inventory of the Published Works of Peter Ramus (1515-1572) and of Omer Talon (ca. 1510-1562) in their original and in their variously altered forms by Walter J. Ong, 1958
  6. Peter Ramus's Attack on Cicero: Text and Translation of Ramus's 'Brutinae Quaestiones.': An article from: Renaissance Quarterly by Joseph S. Freedman, 1994-06-22
  7. Peter Ramus And The Educational Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century by Frank Pierrepont Graves, 2010-09-10
  8. Peter Ramus and the Educational Reformation of the Sixteenth Century by Frank Pierrepont Graves, 1912
  9. Ramus and Talon Inventory: A short-title inventory of the published works of Peter Ramus (1515-1572) and of Omer Talon (ca. 1510-1562) in their original and in their variously altered forms, with related material by Walter J. Ong, 1958
  10. Peter Ramus And The Educational Reformation Of The Sixteenth Century by Frank Pierrepont Graves, 2010-09-10
  11. RAMUS, PETER(15151572): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Walter, S.J. Ong, 2006
  12. Peter Ramus's Attack on Cicero: Text and Translation of Ramus's brutinae Quaestiones
  13. Arguments in Rhetoric Against Quintilian Translation and Text of PeterRamus's "Rhetoricae Distinctiones in Quintilianum (1549)" by Peter; Newlands, Carole Ramus, 1986-01-01
  14. Dialecticae Institutiones. Aristotelicae Animadversiones. Faksimile-Neudruck der Ausgaben Paris 1543 by Peter Ramus, 1964

41. ULB-Düsseldorf - Autoren Und Anonyma R
Translate this page ramus, peter (Fachbibliothek), phid72200. ramus, peter, relm68000. ramus, peter,rome77100. ramus, Petrus (Fachbibliothek), phid72200
http://www.ub.uni-duesseldorf.de/fachinfo/Autoren und Anonyma/pr

42. RAMUS REVISITED: THE USES AND LIMITS OF CLASSICAL RHETORIC
Then in the sixteenth century, peter ramus redefined rhetoric by transferringinvention and arrangement to dialectics, the study of argumentation.
http://jac.gsu.edu/jac/2/Articles/7.htm
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JAC 2.1 - 2 (1981)
RAMUS REVISITED: THE USES AND LIMITS OF CLASSICAL RHETORIC
Jane R. Walpole
All that we teach as rhetoric today can be traced, in a more or less straight line, back to Aristotle. His concepts, his schemata, still shape our methods in the composition classroom. But especially since the Renaissance, rhetoric has come to mean more and more the study of the written, rather than the spoken, word. Two parts of Aristotle's five were quickly neglected: memory and delivery. Then in the sixteenth century, Peter Ramus redefined rhetoric by transferring invention and arrangement to dialectics, the study of argumentation. Thus, the sole element of Ramian rhetoric was style. The results of this radical surgery can be seen in the overblown eupheuistic prose of John Lyly, or in Elizabethan rhetoric books with their listings of one hundred and sixty-odd tropes and schemes. Actually, the rhetoric of writing involves not only invention, arrangement, and style. It also includes memory and delivery. Memory is the written word itself, as Plato pointed out in the

43. Defining Advanced Composition:
peter ramus’s Dialectic (1546) is one of his influential assaults against broad and ramus, peter. Arguments in Rhetoric against Quintilian. Trans.
http://jac.gsu.edu/jac/8/Articles/14.htm
buy back issues add to the archive contact an editor home
JAC 8 (1988)
Defining Advanced Composition: Contributions from the History of Rhetoric
William A. Covino
But that use of wit and knowledge is to be allowed, which laboureth to make doubtful things certain, and not those which labour to make certain things doubtful. So then that knowledge is worthiest which is charged with least multiplicity. Francis Bacon, Advancement of Learning Francis Bacon ushers in the Enlightenment when in 1605 he equates advanced knowledge with uniformity and universal principles, with cer­tainty, with the schematization of diverse phenomena under the rubric of “simple Forms or differences of things, which are few in number” (2.7:96). Later in the seventeenth century, the Royal Society of London for Improv­ing Natural Knowledge would reaffirm the importance of reducing and containing the diversity of the world, reinforcing the prevailing belief that intellectual maturity coincides with order, perspicuity, and closure, and calling for a reform of language that would “reject all amplifications, digressions, and swellings of style, [and] return back to the primitive purity, and shortness, when men delivered so many things

44. Matteo Ricci And The Art Of Memory
peter ramus and the art of memory. Nya media startsida ramus held that thisstructure absorbed the art of memory into that of logic.
http://130.238.79.99/ilmh/Ren/soc-memory-ramus.htm
1.21. Minneskonsten efter antiken Peter Ramus and the art of memory One important proponent of the art of memory in the Renaissance was Matteo Ricci, the first Jesuit to visit China. His use of the art made a huge impression on the Confucian scholars of his day. The uses of spatiality - Mnemonic uses of space (SIMA, University of Manchester) NYA MEDIA OCH FALLET SOKRATES Jonathan Spence on Matteo Ricci's art of memory Nya media och fallet Sokrates

45. List Of Scientists By Field
Translate this page ramus, peter. Rankine, Alexander Oliver. Rankine, Alexander Oliver. Rankine,William John Macquorn. Rankine, William John Macquorn. Ranvier, Louis-Antoine
http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/r.html
Rabl, Cari Rabl, Cari Rademacher, Hans Radon, Johann Raffles, Thomas Stamford Bingley Rafinesque, Constantine Samuel Raman, Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, Chandrasekhara Venkata Ramanujan, Srinivasa Aaiyangar Rames, Jean Baptiste Rames, Jean Baptiste Rammelsberg, Karl Ramon, Gaston Ramsauer, Carl Wilhelm Ramsay, Andrew Crombie Ramsay, William Ramsdell, Lewis Stephen Ramsdell, Lewis Stephen Ramsdell, Lewis Stephen Ramsden, Jesse Ramsey, Frank Plumpton Ramus, Peter Ramus, Peter Ramus, Peter Rankine, Alexander Oliver Rankine, Alexander Oliver Rankine, William John Macquorn Rankine, William John Macquorn Ranvier, Louis-Antoine Ranyard, Arthur Cowper Raspe, Rudolf Erich Raspe, Rudolf Erich Rateau, Auguste Camille Edmond Rateau, Auguste Camille Edmond Rathke, Martin Heinrich Rathke, Martin Heinrich Ratzel, Friedrich Ratzel, Friedrich Ratzel, Friedrich Raulin, Jules Rauwolf, Leonhard Ray, John Ray, Prafulla Chandra Rayet, Georges Antoine Pons Raymond of Marseilles Raymond, Percy Edward Raymond, Percy Edward Razmadze, Andrei Mikhailovich Ra Reck, Hans Reck, Hans

46. Reviews
peter ramus, peter ramus s Attack on Cicero Text and Translation of ramus sBrutinae Quaestiones (ed. JJ Murphy and Carole Newlands).
http://www2.tltc.ttu.edu/george/Vita/reviews.htm
Reviews 27. Juan Signes Codoñer, Carmen Codoñer Merino, and Arantxa Domingo Malvadi. Biblioteca y epistolario de Hernán Núñez de Guzmán (El Pinciano): Una aproximación al humanismo español del siglo XVI . Nueva Roma, 14. Madrid: Consejo superior de investigaciones científicas, 2001. In Neo-Latin News 26. Perrine Galand - Hallyn, ed., transl., and commentator, with the collaboration of Georges André Bergére. Un Professeur-Po P te Humaniste: Joannes Vaccaeus La Sylve Parisienne Gen P ve: Droz, 2002. lxxxviii + 122pp. ISBN: 2-600-00802-0. ISSN: 0082-6081. In Renaissance Quarterly 25. E. Antonio de Nebrija. Aurelii Prudentii Clementis V.C. libelli: cum commento Antonii Nebrissensis . Estudio, edición crítica y traducción de Felipe González Vega. Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca, 2002. In Renaissance Quarterly Romans in a New World: Classical Models in Sixteenth -Century Spanish America , by David A. Lupher. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003. In Classical Outlook Bibliografía sobre Luis Vives . by Francisco Calero and Daniel Sala. Valencia: Ajuntament de Valencia, 1999. In

47. Print Culture - A Bibliography
Sharratt, peter. The Present State of Studies on ramus. Recent Work onpeter ramus (19701986). Rhetorica A Journal of the History of Rhetoric 5
http://www.mantex.co.uk/ou/resource/text-bib2.htm
Home Tutorials Bookshop Software ... Subscribe here for our free email newsletter Print Culture
a bibliography Abdurgham, Alison. Women in Print: Writing and Women's Magazines from the Restoration to the Accession of Victoria Altick, Richard Daniel. The English Common Reader: A Social History of the Mass Reading Public, 1800-1900 . 2nd ed. Columbus: Ohio State UP, 1998. Armbruster, Carol, ed. Publishing and Readership in Revolutionary France and America . Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1993. Anderson, Benedict R. O'Gorman. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism . Rev. ed. London: Verso, 1991. Anderson, Patricia. The Printed Image and the Transformation of Popular Culture 1790-1860 . Oxford: Clarendon P of Oxford UP, 1991. Armstrong, Adrian. Technique and Technology: Script, Print, and Poetics in France 1470-1550 . New York: Oxford UP, 2000. Barker, Hannah and David Vincent. Language, Print, and Electoral Politics, 1790-1832: Newcastle-under-Lyme Broadsides . Rochester, NY: Boydell P/Parliamentary History Yearbook Trust, 2001.

48. Catalogue
ramus, peter. Via Regia ad Geometriam. The way to Geometry. being necessary Written in Latine by peter ramus, and now translated by Mr. William Bedwell.
http://www.history.rochester.edu/steam/dircks/catalogue.html
CATALOGUE OF EARLY SCIENTIFIC WORKS,
PRINCIPALLY ANTERIOR TO THE PUBLICATION OF THE
CENTURY OF INVENTIONS, IN 1663;
WITH A FEW MODERN AUTHORITIES ON MECHANICAL INVENTIONS, AFFORDING
COLLATERAL ILLUSTRATIONS.
BABINGTON, JOHN, Pyrotechnia: or, A Discourse of Artificiall Fire works. Whereunto is annexed a short treatise of Geometrie. Folio. 1635
BACON, ROGER. Frier Bacon his discovery of the miracles of art nature and magick. Faithfully translated out of Dr. Dee's own copy, by T. M. and never before in English. London Printed for Simon Miller, at the Starre in St. Pauls Church-yard. 12mo. 63 pages. 1659.
BARLOW, PETER,
BATE, JOHN, The Mysteries of Nature and Art in four severall parts. The first of water-works: the second of fire-works: the third of drawing, washing, limping, painting, and engraving: the fourth of sundry experiments. 4to. 1634. The second edition. 1635.
BECHERUS, J. J. Character, pro Notia Linguarum universali. 8vo. Franc. 1661.
BEDWELL, WILLIAM._See Peter Ramus. BESSON JACQUES. Il Theatro de gl' Instrumenti e Machine con una brieve dichiaration di tutte le figure di F. Beroaldo. Folio. Lione, 1582.

49. Protestant Scholasticism
peter ramus modeled his logic on Plato and Cicero in an attempt to avoid toogreat an emphasis on metaphysics. Though his work was banned in various
http://mb-soft.com/believe/txc/scholasp.htm
Protestant Scholasticism
Advanced Information A method of thinking developed in early Protestantism, which grew stronger in the seventeenth century and became a widely accepted way to create systematic Protestant theologies. Even though the major Protestant Reformers attacked the theology of the medieval schoolmen and demanded total reliance on Scripture, it was impossible either to purge all scholastic methods and attitudes derived from classical authors or to avoid conflicts that required intricate theological reasoning as well as biblical interpretation. Several factors account for the growth of Protestant scholasticism: formal education, confidence in reason, and religious controversy. Reliance on logical methods derived from Greek and Roman authors was purged from sixteenth century educational insititutions. Aristotle, for example, upon whom the medieval scholastics had relied, continued to be taught by Protestants: Melanchthon at Wittenberg, Peter Martyr Vermigli at Oxford, Jerome Zanchi at Strassburg, Conrad Gesner at Zurich, Theodore Beza at Geneva. Though these teachers did not accept Thomas Aquinas's medieval scholastic theology, which also relied heavily on Aristotle's logic and philosophy, they did teach Aristotle's deductive logic and gave reason an important place in theology. BELIEVE
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web-site Our List of 1,000 Religious Subjects

50. 16th And 17thC Natural Philosophers
1536 21yo peter ramus shocks the University of Paris passim. Everything Aristotlesaid was wrong! Paracelsus proposes 3 elements are salt, sulfur,
http://www.robotwisdom.com/science/natphils/
[Up: science] [Robot Wisdom home page]
Timeline of 16th/17thC natural philosophers
Jorn Barger April 2003 This is a 'magnified' subsection of my knowledge-representation timeline pre-1500 universities choose math professors based on public contests (techniques kept secret) [cite] 1436: Regiomontanus born [bio]
1462: Trithemius born [etexts]
1464: Ficino translates Corpus Hermeticum [etext]
1473: 19Feb: Copernicus born in Poland (rich and well-connected) [bio]
1484: 23Aug: Scaliger born in Padua [bio] [bio]
1486: 14Sep: Agrippa born in Germany [bio] [etexts] Copernicus studies Euclid, Ptolemy, Aristotle at Krakow; law in Bologna (assists astronomy professor) 1493: Paracelsus born in Switzerland [bio]
1494: 24Mar: Agricola born in Germany [bio]
1497: 24yo Copernicus gets lifetime sinecure
Agrippa studies 'magic sciences' at Cologne 1500: Tartaglia born in Italy [bio] [bio]
1501: 24Sep: Cardan (Cardano) born in Milan (father knew da Vinci) [bio] [bio]
1501: Copernicus studies astronomy in Padua 1503: Copernicus studies medicine, law 1505: Horapollo's 4thC fantasia of hieroglyphic symbolism published (will help inspire universal-language fad) [cite] vulture = "mother, sight, the end of a thing, knowledge of the future, year, sky, mercy, Minerva, Juno, or two drachmas"

51. HCE Bogblog August.04
The crowd had at peter ramus energetically on the third day of the massacre peter ramus had argued unsuccessfully for a new conception of the art of
http://homepage.mac.com/bbarry/volume.02/August04.html
Bogblog
Two Bar was a name they gave a certain view of the Paris Basin, from their side of the river looking north past the clumps of muck and stranded flood wrack which would later host St. Chappel, Notre Dame and, set just upstream, the favorably disposed citydwellings of the anciently and permanently rich of present day Paris, but seeing then, instead, the place where by the wrestlings of chance and design it would become. The controversial
Barry Coat of Arms prolix a. [L. prolixus , extended, prolix; pro , forth, and root of liquere , to flow.] . long, extended, of long duration. [Obs.]
. long and wordy; extending or spread out to a great length; tedious; tiresome; diffuse; as, a prolix oration; a prolix poem.
. given to or indulging in long and wordy discourses; tedious, prosy; discussing at great length; as a prolix writer.
Syn. Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary
Deluxe Second Edition The Unordered Standards Recently from staff:
The Quarterly Draft Bogmetric
And:
The Revised Authorized Standard Bogblog Bogmetric Bookmark
Added sign of validity:
Coming soon in the comic American Adventure series: "Baghdad Funnies" Our recently rescinded first editon (featuring The Mage of Baghdad!

52. Crooked Timber » » The Great Migration
Posted by peter ramus · March 11th, 2005 at 1229 pm. You need to turn down yourspam filter. I can’t comment from the office to here.
http://crookedtimber.org/2005/03/10/the-great-migration/
Crooked Timber
Main All bloggers are liars
The Great Migration
Posted by Kieran Healy CT has switched platforms from MovableType to WordPress . Thanks to lead WordPress developer Matt Mullenweg CSS fn1. This is a test of footnotes. posted on Thursday, March 10th, 2005 at 9:01 pm comments
  • Your RSS feed has reverted to just a snippet from each entry, rather than full entries. You may have done this on purpose, but I hope not. Thanks. Posted by allen claxton · March 10th, 2005 at 9:19 pm Posted by allen claxton · March 10th, 2005 at 9:20 pm The CSS Posted by nick · March 10th, 2005 at 9:40 pm I use wordpress, and I like it very much; but, as I wrote earlier, I think a site such as this would be better off with scoop. Posted by Jonathan March 10th, 2005 at 9:46 pm Posted by David Weman March 10th, 2005 at 9:49 pm Posted by Jonathan Lundell March 10th, 2005 at 9:52 pm Posted by luci phyrr · March 10th, 2005 at 9:59 pm Posted by Jonathan March 10th, 2005 at 10:05 pm RSS Posted by March 10th, 2005 at 10:05 pm Posted by novalis March 10th, 2005 at 10:12 pm Also credit to Carthik Sharma who helped me out quite a bit.
  • 53. Crooked Timber » » Discovering Steve Earle
    Posted by peter ramus · February 5th, 2005 at 228 pm. Chris— Here’sa downloadablemp3 of James McMurtry’s song “We Can’t Make it Here”.
    http://crookedtimber.org/2005/02/05/discovering-steve-earle/
    Crooked Timber
    Main Six Nations
    Discovering Steve Earle
    Posted by Chris Bertram Bob Harris Country on BBC BBC Just an American Boy several times in a row. posted on Saturday, February 5th, 2005 at 1:25 pm comments
  • Two words: Johny Cash . (URL tweaked for charitable purposes, and to check I could.) Posted by des von bladet February 5th, 2005 at 1:49 pm Posted by peter ramus · February 5th, 2005 at 2:28 pm Posted by peter ramus · February 5th, 2005 at 3:04 pm Posted by John Barton · February 5th, 2005 at 4:53 pm Posted by phred · February 5th, 2005 at 5:14 pm no more being shamed before europeans. Posted by yabonn February 5th, 2005 at 6:51 pm MUST Posted by nolo · February 5th, 2005 at 7:05 pm Posted by Chris Bertram February 5th, 2005 at 8:16 pm Posted by ionfish February 5th, 2005 at 9:16 pm Posted by ProfWombat · February 5th, 2005 at 9:22 pm Posted by phred · February 5th, 2005 at 9:35 pm Posted by phred · February 5th, 2005 at 9:43 pm Two Words: Hank Williams. Senior, that is, not his over commercialized, over produced, and under talented progeny. Posted by The Defeatist February 5th, 2005 at 10:49 pm
  • 54. ChemTeam: Atomic Structure - Democritus To Dalton
    C) peter ramus (15151572) broke with Aristotle early in his life. (Remember,the Catholic Church had long ago elevated Aristotle s works to Scripture.
    http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/webdocs/AtomicStructure/Democritus-to-Dalton.html
    Atomic Structure from Democritus to Dalton
    Return to Atomic Structure menu In 1803, John Dalton of England introduced the atomic idea to chemistry (and is called the Father of Modern Atomic Theory for his efforts). However, it would be false to assume that atomic ideas disappeared completely from the intellectual map for over 2000 years. For, although atomic thinkers between the Greeks and Dalton were few, there is a fairly continuous line from the Greeks to John Dalton. Much of the following is based on these articles: 1) "The Origins of the Atomic Theory" by J.R. Partington. Annals of Science, vol 4, no. 3 (July, 1939)
    2) "The Atomic View of Matter in the XVth, XVIth, and XVIIth Centuries" by G.B. Stones. Isis, vol. 10, part 2, No. 34 (January 1928). I. Atomism in Antiquity The atomic ideas of Leucippus and Democritus (from about 440 BC) were opposed by Aristotle about 100 years or so later. Those who acknowledged Aristotle as their master opposed atoms. Since Epicurus was an atomist, he was opposed by his rivals, the Stoics. Cicero, Seneca and Galen all spoke against atoms. Hero of Alexandria (150 A.D.?) makes use of atoms to explain compression and rarefaction (to thin something out; become less dense). Hero denied the existence of an extended vacuum, but allowed for a vacuum between atoms. One proof he cited was that fire could enter into a material, showing that it had openings, i.e., a vacuum. He pointed out that the pores of a diamond were too small to let in fire and so the stone was incombustible. (In the 1700's, both Lavosier and Priestly were able to burn diamonds with large lenses that concentrated the sunlight.)

    55. McLuhan Studies Premiere Issue: The War Within The Word: McLuhan's History Of Th
    was examining the sixteenth century logician peter ramus and his effects on dialectic in the Renaissance, particularly in the figure of peter ramus.
    http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/mcluhan-studies/v1_iss1/1_1art6.htm
    McLuhan Studies : Premiere Issue
    Home Page
    Next Article
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    Table of Contents
    Author Index
    Title Index
    BILL KUHNS
    THE WAR WITHIN THE WORD:
    MCLUHAN'S HISTORY OF THE TRIVIUM
    But the absence of the Nashe thesis from McLuhan's available work tends to underscore a perhaps greater irony. The Nashe study contains, in historically fixed coordinates that are sighted as distantly as the Greeks, the exact precedents and traditions to which McLuhan's later thought belongs-indeed, the company to which he himself belongs. Even had McLuhan not written the Nashe thesis (if, conceivably, it were to have appeared from another pen) it would nonetheless have provided what arguably no other source yet does: a history of human thought and expression that can easily accommodate the likes of a Marshall McLuhan. He remarks, in a footnote early in Nashe , "We have taken over the attitudes of Renaissance controversialists without knowing what the controversies were originally about." He is referring to the feud between Ciceronians like Erasmus, Francis Bacon, Thomas Nashe, and the "extraordinary anti-Ciceronian movement which emerges in Machiavelli, Vives, Ramus, Montaigne...and which gives us our post-Renaissance world." But he is also announcing the precipice at which he makes the audacity of his leap into the Nashe thesis, a precipice that would decades later become almost synonymous with his name. He is suggesting an almost unheard-of interpenetration between ancient disputes and contemporary affinities, between severed historic traditions and the shape and nature of contemporary attitudes. In

    56. Cognition Séquentielle Et Langage
    Works in progress by peter Dominey and coll Dominey PF, ramus F (2000)Neural network processing of natural lanugage I. Sensitivity to serial,
    http://www.isc.cnrs.fr/dom/dommenu-en.htm
    Demonstration of human - robot interaction
    (Robot cognition working group

      Works in progress by Peter Dominey and coll :
      for the other works of the team, please see the French version
    Overview For more than a decade I have explored the functional neurophysiology of cognitive processes in behavioral sequence learning, gradually progressing from the oculomotor control, through sensoriotor sequence learning to language processing and visual scene analysis. The common elements across this trajectory has been the organization of these behaviors in time, and the functional neurophysiology of cortex and basal ganglia that implement this organization. A very brief overview is provided with pointers to appropriate publications in the following paragraphs: The Saccade Model

    57. Annotation: Peter Ramus And The Naming Of Methodism: Medieval Science Through Ra
    In face, as Ong reveals in his article, the term experienced a shift in meaning;it originally referred to the approach of peter ramus, in which method is
    http://homepages.udayton.edu/~youngkbr/annpeterramus.htm
    In this article, the second produced from Ong's Ph.D. work, Ong divides his thoughts on the topic into four sections. In the first section of the article, he explains that the term "method," as it was used to identify members of the Methodist denomination of the Protestant Church founded by John Wesley, has always been something of a mystery, even to Wesley himself. While Wesley did know that the name had been applied to an earlier group of physicians, he believed that the term had always been used to refer to people whose daily lives were very routine, regardless of what discipline they worked in. In face, as Ong reveals in his article, the term experienced a shift in meaning; it originally referred to the approach of Peter Ramus, in which method is attached to the realm of pure logic and applied to all the different disciplines. Before Ong discusses the work of Ramus, however, he explains (in the second section of his article) that despite Wesley's confusion about the origin of the term "method," Wesley actually discusses the term in his own work, particularly in A Compendium of Logic . While this work by Wesley is not thoroughly Ramist, Ramus' influence can be seen in several ways: Wesley's use of dichotomies (he defines method in two parts, splits those parts into other parts, and so on), his insistence on "homogeneity" in method (Ramus' approach encouraged using only logic to analyze rather than mixing logic with other elements, such as rhetoric), and his emphasis on a general-to-specific pattern of reasoning. The influence of Ramus on Wesley can be seen especially clearly in an appendix in

    58. Articles, 1960-1969
    ramus, peter. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Vol. 7. Ed. Paul Edwards. ramus, peter. The New Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12 Ed. William J. McDonald
    http://homepages.udayton.edu/~youngkbr/Art1960.htm
    Articles, 1960-1969 "Academic Excellence and Cosmic Vision." National Catholic Educational Association Bulletin: Report of the Proceedings and AddressesFifty-Seventh Annual Meeting, Chicago, Illinois 19-22 Apr. 1960 57 (Aug. 1960): 37-50. "The Faculty Role: In the Liberal Arts." Higher Education in the United States: Report of the 1959 Midwest Fulbright Conference for Visiting Scholars From Abroad, held at Lindenwood College, St. Charles, Mo. 6-9 June 1959; sponsored by Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., in cooperation with the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils, Committee on International Exchange of Persons, with funds provided by the United States Department of State . St. Louis: Washington U, 1960. 31-33. Mimeographed. "Latin and the Social Fabric." Yale Review 50 (Sept. 1960): 18-31. Sequel: "Latin and the Social Fabric." Newsweek 7 Nov. 1960: 109. Rpt in Japanese (as "Ratengo to shakaikiko") in Americana: A Monthly Journal of Humanities, Social Sciences, and Natural Sciences 7 (July 1961): 50-64; in

    59. Alexandria 3
    A Note Against the Aristotelians by peter ramus The Divine Sophia Isis, Achamoth,and Ialdabaoth by Lee Irwin Ruminations on All and Everything by peter
    http://www.phanes.com/alexan3.html
    ALEXANDRIA 3
    Cosmology, Philosophy, Myth, and Culture
    Edited by David Fideler
    C ONTENTS
    Introduction: Education and the Signs of the Times by David Fideler
    Harmony Made Visible by Michael S. Schneider
    The Alchemy of Art by Arthur Versluis
    Ecopsychology in Theory and Practice: A Report on the 1994 Conference by Melissa Nelson
    A Note Against the Aristotelians by Peter Ramus
    The Divine Sophia: Isis, Achamoth, and Ialdabaoth by Lee Irwin
    Ruminations on All and Everything by Peter Russell
    Clement of Alexandria's Letter to Theodore Containing Fragments of a Secret Gospel of Mark
    The Strange Case of the Secret Gospel According to Mark: How Morton Smith's Discovery of a Lost Letter of Clement of Alexandria Scandalized Biblical Scholarship
    by Shawn Eyer
    Knowledge, Reason, and Ethics: A Neoplatonic Perspective by Michael Hornum
    Delphi's Enduring Message: On the Need for Oracular Communications in Psychological Life by Dianne Skafte Two Lyrics by Christopher Reynolds Lyric on a Renaissance Woodcut by David Fideler Anatolius: On the Decad . Translated by Robin Waterfield Two Letters of Marsilio Ficino Proclus's Hymn to the One . Translated by Michael Hornum Cosmologies by Dana Wilde The Invisible College by Anthony Rooley Reviving the Academies of the Muses by David Fideler Plato, Athena, and Saint Katherine: The Education of the Philosopher

    60. Caltech Press Release, 5/3/2005, Peter Schroder, David Baltimore, Bonnie Khang-K
    Joshua ramus, OMA partner and head of its New York office, will lead the designteam. peter Schroder, professor of computer science and chairman of the
    http://pr.caltech.edu/media/Press_Releases/PR12686.html
    Related Links Information Science and Technology
    Architect Chosen for Annenberg IST Center
    PASADENA, Calif. - The California Institute of Technology has selected the partnership of the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) and Gruen Associates to design the new Walter and Leonore Annenberg Center for Information Science and Technology. OMA will lead the project and design the building. Joshua Ramus, OMA partner and head of its New York office, will lead the design team. Gruen Associates, which is based in Los Angeles, will provide executive architecture services. OMA, led by Pritzker Prize-winning architect, Rem Koolhaas, has designed a number of critically acclaimed buildings. Ramus and Koolhaas recently worked together on the Seattle Public Library and the Dallas Performing Arts Center's Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre. Ramus, the Annenberg Center's principal in charge, has led the development of most of OMA's U.S. projects. He was project director for the design of the Guggenheim Las Vegas and its sister project, the Guggenheim-Hermitage Museum, both of which opened in 2001. "We are delighted to have a design partner of the highest caliber in OMA. The combined intellect of Rem Koolhaas and Joshua Ramus will help us realize the full potential of the physical vision for IST," said David Baltimore, president of Caltech. "I am confident that they will design a building that will encourage the effective exchange of ideas across academic disciplines." Peter Schroder, professor of computer science and chairman of the Annenberg Center building committee noted, "OMAs approach to the design of a building is as exacting and thorough as our approach to science and engineering. We have a real meeting of the minds."

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