Question

Building on the work of Nicole Oresme, members of this school formulated a physical reference variety of the “latitude of forms.” For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this university, whose namesake “Calculators” worked on theories of insolubles and developed the mean speed theorem.
ANSWER: University of Oxford [accept Merton College; accept the Oxford Calculators]
[10h] William of Heytsesbury documented the mean speed theorem in his book Rules for Solving [these statements]. Richard Kilvington collected many of these ambiguously true statements, such as “Socrates is whiter than Plato begins to be white.”
ANSWER: sophismata [accept Rules for Solving Sophisms]
[10e] Oxford logicians such as Thomas Bradwardine often wrote about logical puzzles such as sophismata and insolubles, which include this epistemic paradox that can be written as “this statement is false.”
ANSWER: liar paradox [or the liar’s paradox; accept the Epimenides paradox or the Cretan paradox]
<Philosophy - Philosophy>

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Summary

2024 ARGOS @ Chicago11/23/2024Y611.6783%33%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Christ's College12/14/2024Y313.33100%33%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Columbia11/23/2024Y36.6733%33%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Stanford02/22/2025Y320.00100%67%33%

Data

just one more half-dot broWalston et. al.0000
Cope is the thing with feathers12 Litres of Green Tea001010
jeff mcneil #1 morningside heights fan clubNJ TRANSit (and anwen i guess)100010