• doctrine of the lektón associated with each sign of a language, but distinct from both the sign itself and the thing to which it refers. This lektón was the meaning...
    66 KB (8,564 words) - 22:55, 21 September 2024
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    area of the Troad. There was a lighthouse at Cape Baba that was called Lekton (Latinized as Lectum) in classical times, anglicised as Cape Lecture. Cape...
    4 KB (359 words) - 18:58, 9 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Stoicism
    Sextus Empiricus, Adversus Mathematicos 10.218. (chronos, topos, kenon, lekton) Marcelo D. Boeri, The Stoics on Bodies and Incorporeals, The Review of...
    51 KB (5,877 words) - 15:37, 12 October 2024
  • the utterance; and an incorporeal item—the lektón (sayable)—that which is conveyed in the language. The lekton is not a statement but the content of a statement...
    34 KB (3,886 words) - 07:36, 29 August 2024
  • Sextus Empiricus, Adversus Mathematicos 10.218. (chronos, topos, kenon, lekton) Marcelo D. Boeri, The Stoics on Bodies and Incorporeals, The Review of...
    34 KB (4,737 words) - 12:26, 19 September 2024
  • Sextus Empiricus, Adversus Mathematicos 10.218. (chronos, topos, kenon, lekton) Marcelo D. Boeri, The Stoics on Bodies and Incorporeals, The Review of...
    39 KB (4,990 words) - 07:43, 15 September 2024
  • referred to or described by the utterance; and an incorporeal item, the lekton, that which is conveyed in the language. Basilides denied the existence...
    2 KB (223 words) - 21:13, 2 July 2023
  • their theory is the idea that what is expressed by a sentence, called a lekton, is something real; this corresponds to what is now called a proposition...
    102 KB (13,265 words) - 23:10, 16 September 2024