Jean Buridan
Latin Joannes Buridanus
born 1300, probably at Béthune, France
died 1358
Aristotelian philosopher, logician, and scientific
theorist in optics and mechanics.
After studies in philosophy at the University of Paris
under the nominalist thinker William of Ockham, Buridan was
appointed professor of philosophy there. He served as
university rector in 1328 and in 1340, the year in which he
condemned Ockham’s views, an act that is sometimes called
the first seed of theological skepticism. Buridan’s own
works were condemned and placed on the Index of Forbidden
Books from 1474 to 1481 by partisans of Ockham.
A defender of the principle of causality, Buridan
asserted a modified version of traditional moral
determinism, declaring that men must will what presents
itself as the greater good but that the will is free to
delay the reason’s judgment by suggesting a more thorough
inquiry into the value of motives. The dilemma of a
particular kind of moral choice, between two evidently
identical items, is illustrated by the celebrated allegory
of “Buridan’s ass,” though the animal mentioned in Buridan’s
commentary on Aristotle’s De caelo (“On the Heavens”) is
actually a dog, not an ass. His discussion centres on the
method by which the dog chooses between two equal amounts of
food placed before him. Discerning both a symmetry of
information and a symmetry of preference about the two
items, he concludes that the dog must choose at random; this
outcome leads to the investigation of theories of
probability.
Among Buridan’s achievements in mechanics was his
revision of Aristotle’s theory of motion, which had
maintained that a thing is kept moving by the air
surrounding it. Buridan developed a theory of impetus by
which the mover imparts to the moved a power, proportional
to the speed and mass, which keeps it moving. In addition,
he correctly theorized that resistance of the air
progressively reduces the impetus and that weight can add or
detract from speed. His studies of optical images prefigured
modern developments in cinematics. In logic he explicated
doctrines of Aristotle, Ockham, and Peter of Spain. In
addition to commentaries on Aristotle’s Organon, Physics, De
anima, Metaphysics, and Economics, his works include Summula
de dialecta (1487) and Consequentie (1493).