• History of Ontology 
  • Theory of Ontology 
  • Vocabulary of Ontology 
  • Modern Ontologists 
  • History of Truth 
  • Doctrine of Categories 
  • Problem of Universals 
  • Comparative Philosophy 

Digital Quadrivium Project by Raul Corazzon: four websites

Ontologia
Logica
Rhetorica
Bibliographia
Ontologia
Logica
Rhetorica
Bibliographia

Theory and History of Ontology (www.ontology.co)

by Raul Corazzon | e-mail: rc@ontology.co

Digital Quadrivium Project by Raul Corazzon: four websites

Ontologia: Theory and History of Ontology

Ontologia

 

  • Logica: History of Logic
  • Rhetorica: Theory and History of Rhetoric
  • Bibliographia: Bibliographies on religion and philosophy

 

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  • History
  • Theory
  • Vocabulary
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  • History of Truth
  • Doctrine of Categories
  • Problem of Universals
  • Comparative Philosophy
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Theory and History of Ontology

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Perplexity report: Raul Corazzon’s Digital Quadrivium Project

Report date: January 30th, 2026

The Digital Quadrivium Project is a long‑term, single‑author, online research infrastructure created by Raul Corazzon that consists of four tightly connected, heavily annotated bibliographical websites on ontology, logic, rhetoric, and philosophy–religion broadly construed.

Overall structure and aims

  • The project unifies four sites:
  • Theory and History of Ontology (ontology.co)
  • History of Logic from Aristotle to Gödel (historyoflogic.com)
  • Theory and History of Rhetoric (historyofrhetoric.com)
  • Bibliographia. Annotated Bibliographies (bibliographia.co).
  • All four share: a common search function, e‑book/PDF download options, a focus on historical development, and large, curated bibliographies with annotations and excerpts from primary and secondary literature.
  • Together they currently offer roughly 16800 references in ontology, 4300 in logic, 1300 in rhetoric, and 2400 in religion/philosophy, many with notes and abstracts, and they are explicitly described as works in progress with “thousands of new references” planned.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Project overview
  • 2. Ontology.co: A Hierarchical Resource Guide for Philosophical Ontology
  • 3. Historyoflogic.com: A Chronological and Thematic Encyclopedia of Logic
  • 4. Historyofrhetoric.com: A Structurally Parallel Resource for Rhetorical Studies
  • 5. Bibliographia (www.bibliographia.co)
  • 6. Unifying features of the Digital Quadrivium Project

Raul Corazzon’s Digital Quadrivium Project is a unified, long‑term scholarly enterprise of four large, interlinked websites that provide deeply annotated bibliographies on ontology, logic, rhetoric, and philosophy of religion broadly understood.[1][2][3]

Project overview

  • The four sites are: Theory and History of Ontology (co), History of Logic from Aristotle to Gödel (historyoflogic.com), Theory and History of Rhetoric (historyofrhetoric.com), and Bibliographia. Annotated Bibliographies (bibliographia.co).[2][3][1]
  • Together they offer around 26,800 bibliographic entries corresponding to about 13,700 PDF pages, with “thousands of new references” still being prepared.[3][1][2]
  • Each site can be downloaded as an ebook/PDF and all share a cross‑site search, so the four function as one integrated resource.[1][2][3]

Scope by site (pages in PDF format)

Site

Thematic focus

Approx. references

Approx. PDF pages

Theory and History of Ontology

Ontology, metaphysics, related history of philosophy

16,800 [1]

9,000 [1][3]

History of Logic from Aristotle to Gödel

Formal and philosophical logic, mainly Western tradition

4,300 [2][1]

2,600 [2][3][1]

Theory and History of Rhetoric

Rhetoric, argumentation, rhetoric–philosophy interface

1,300 [3]

600 [3]

Bibliographia. Annotated Bibliographies

Philosophy and religion, esp. early Christianity/Judaism

2,400 [1]

1,500 [1]

(All totals are explicitly stated by Corazzon on the sites.)[2][3][1]

 

  1. Theory and History of Ontology

Aims and intellectual profile

  • Corazzon defines ontology as “the theory of objects and their ties,” distinguishing concrete/abstract, existent/nonexistent, real/ideal, independent/dependent objects and their relations.[1]
  • He distinguishes three kinds of ontology: (a) formal, (b) descriptive, and (c) formalized ontology.[1]
  • Formal ontology, following Husserl, studies the “genera of being” and fundamental categories using eidetic reduction and categorial intuition.[1]

Content structure

Key thematic axes include:[1]

  • Historical lineages: from Bolzano, Brentano, Meinong, Husserl, Frege and Twardowski to twentieth‑century phenomenological, analytic, Austro‑Polish and so‑called “Continental” ontologies (Heidegger, Merleau‑Ponty, Levinas, Deleuze, Foucault, etc.).[1]
  • Conceptual analyses:
    • Formal vs material ontology (Husserl and Albertazzi).[1]
    • Theory of objects (Meinong, Twardowski, Ingarden, Farber).[1]
    • Logic and ontology (Bochenski, Cocchiarella) and the relation to Leibniz’s characteristica universalis and calculus ratiocinator.[1]
  • Definitions from analytic metaphysics and ontology: quotations and commentary from Dejnožka, Jacquette, Simons, Cameron and others on different senses of “ontology” and its relation to metaphysics.[1]

Special features

  • “Table of Ontologists of 19th and 20th Centuries” tracing lines from Bolzano–Brentano–Frege to contemporary authors, with entries including bibliographies, abstracts, and critical judgments.[1]
  • Extensive, language‑diverse bibliographies: about 16,800 references in English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese, focusing on under‑documented ontological topics and authors.[1]
  • Systematic attention to interfaces with logic, semantics, and semiotics, especially predication, reference, and the relation between thought, language, and world.[1]
  1. History of Logic from Aristotle to Gödel

Aims and coverage

  • Dedicated to the history of logic, especially formal logic, “from Aristotle to Gödel.”[2][1]
  • Uses as a conceptual starting point Joseph Bochenski’s A History of Formal Logic and his article “Logic and Ontology,” both heavily excerpted and annotated.[2][1]

Conceptual framework (following Bochenski)

  • Logic is delimited historically by reference to Aristotle’s Organon, especially the Prior Analytics and its theory of syllogism and logical form.[2][1]
  • Bochenski distinguishes several questions about relations between logic and ontology: objective content, subjective (historical) views, and metatheoretical philosophies of logic.[2][1]
  • He reconstructs historical positions from Aristotle, the Stoics, Scholastics, Humanists, Leibniz, and the era up to Boole, emphasizing shifts between logic as dialectical art, metalinguistic rules, and formal systems.[2][1]

Logical history emphasis

The site’s materials (through long quotations and bibliographic notes) stress:[2][1]

  • Aristotle’s dual legacy:
    • An ontology of “being as being” with categorial analyses;
    • Two logics: topical (dialectical) and formal syllogistic, with incomplete meta‑logical reflection.[2][1]
  • Stoic innovations: a propositional logic and a clear conception of logic as a rule‑system operating on ideal meanings distinct from real bodies.[2][1]
  • Scholastic logic: a metalinguistic, rule‑oriented discipline dealing with propositions and “second intentions,” sharply distinguished from ontology but overlapping it (e.g., two versions of non‑contradiction).[2][1]
  • Early modern “conventional logic”: psychologism, the reduction of logic to a practical “art of thinking,” and the marginalization of formal logic except in Leibniz.[2][1]
  • The revival of historical research on ancient logic in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries (Peirce, Vailati, Rüstow, Łukasiewicz, Scholz, Mates, Ross, etc.).[2][1]

Bibliographic profile

  • The site aggregates about 4,300 annotated references on logic’s history, especially Aristotelian, Stoic, medieval, and early modern traditions, plus early developments of modern formal logic.[3][2][1]
  • Annotations often highlight how each work treats the relation between logic, metaphysics, and ontology, consistent with the project’s cross‑site theme.[2][1]
  1. Theory and History of Rhetoric

Aims and conceptual framing

  • Focused on the historical development of rhetoric, conceived in close relation to dialectic and logic.[3]
  • Corazzon cites Aristotle’s definition of rhetoric as antistrophos (counterpart) of dialectic and as “a sort of offshoot of dialectic and of work in ethics, which it is right to call politics,” and Heidegger’s claim that rhetoric is a “first part of logic rightly understood.”[3]

Planned and current content

The site is structured around large bibliographic sections:[3]

  • General works: theory of rhetoric, argumentation theory, rhetoric and philosophy, critical thinking, feminist rhetoric, and bibliographies of dictionaries and encyclopedias of rhetoric.[3]
  • History of rhetoric:
    • Greek rhetoric (from early sophists to Hellenistic and later Peripatetics, with sections on Protagoras, Gorgias, Isocrates, Plato, Aristotle, Attic orators, Stoics, and other schools).[3]
    • Roman rhetoric (Cato, Cicero, Augustan rhetoric, Second Sophistic, Christian rhetoric).[3]
    • Medieval rhetoric (Augustine, ars poetriae, ars dictaminis, ars predicandi).[3]
    • Renaissance and early modern rhetoric (Valla, Vives, Agricola, Erasmus, Melanchthon, Ramus, Keckermann, Vico, Campbell, Priestly, Lamy, Fénélon, Adam Smith, Hugh Blair).[3]
  • Comparative rhetoric: overviews and region‑specific bibliographies for African, African‑American, Pre‑Columbian American, Ancient Egyptian, Jewish, Arabic, Syriac, Celtic, Near Eastern, Asian, Chinese, and Japanese traditions.[3]
  • Vocabulary of rhetoric: key notions such as enthymeme, epideictic, ethos, logos, pathos, and pisteis.[3]

Stage of development

  • Corazzon notes that this site is still in an early stage: only a subset of planned sections is online, but more pages will be added.[3]
  • Even at this stage it encompasses roughly 1,300 references, corresponding to around 600 PDF pages.[3]
  1. Bibliographia. Annotated Bibliographies on Philosophy and Religion

Aims and thematic focus

  • Dedicated to bibliographical resources on philosophy and religion, with initial focus on the history of early Christianity.[1]
  • It complements co and historyoflogic.com by covering topics in philosophy of religion, phenomenology of religion, sociology of religion, and major religious traditions beyond Christianity and Judaism.[1]

Planned sections

According to Corazzon’s outline:[1]

  • Bibliographies of philosophy: topics in philosophy not treated extensively on the other sites.[1]
  • Hebrew Bible: formation of the Pentateuch and canon, pseudepigrapha, textual criticism, and the history of research.[1]
  • New Testament: synoptic question, individual gospels, letters, Acts, Revelation, canon formation, pseudepigrapha, textual criticism, and history of research.[1]
  • Literature of Early Christianity: Apostolic Fathers, orthodoxy and heresy.[1]
  • Literature of Early Judaism: birth of Judaism, “parting of the ways” between Christianity and Judaism.[1]
  • Philosophy and phenomenology of religion: definitions of religion, analytic vs continental approaches, sacred/profane, debates on the existence of God.[1]
  • Sociology of religion: sociological studies of early Christianity, charisma and routinization, messianism and millenarianism.[1]
  • Study guides: bibliographies of dictionaries and encyclopedias of philosophy, style manuals for philosophy students, and introductory readings on the history of philosophy, metaphysics, ontology, and philosophy of logic.[1]
  • Other religions: planned bibliographies on major non‑Jewish, non‑Christian religions.[1]

Stage and volume

  • Like the rhetoric site, Bibliographia is described as being in an early stage, with only some sections currently available but more planned.[1]
  • It already accounts for about 2,400 bibliographic entries, about 1,500 PDF pages.[1]
  1. Unifying features of the Digital Quadrivium Project

Conceptual unity

  • The project’s title “Digital Quadrivium” alludes to a modern analogue of the medieval quadrivium: instead of arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy, Corazzon’s four pillars are ontology, logic, rhetoric, and broad philosophical–religious bibliography.[2][3][1]
  • Across the sites, he repeatedly emphasizes the interrelation of ontology and logic (formal and material ontology, theory of objects, categorial analysis) and the close connection of rhetoric with dialectic, ethics, politics, and logic.[3][2][1]

Methodological traits

Across all four sites:[2][3][1]

  • Strong historical orientation, from classical sources (Aristotle, Stoics) through medieval and early modern thinkers to contemporary authors.
  • Heavy use of primary and secondary literature excerpts, with careful crediting and notes, but the sites’ distinctive value lies in their structured, themed, and often annotated bibliographies.
  • Emphasis on under‑covered topics and authors, and on non‑English‑language scholarship (notably Italian, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese).
  • Shared infrastructure: identical banner identifying them as parts of a single project, cross‑site search, regular update notes (e.g., January 19, 2026 for ontology and rhetoric, December 16, 2025 for history of logic, October 15, 2025 for Bibliographia).[3][2][1]

Use‑cases for researchers

  • Ontology & metaphysics: comprehensive starting point for work on Husserlian formal ontology, analytic metaphysics, Meinongian object theory, Austro‑Polish ontology, and the Continental tradition.[1]
  • Logic: historically informed research on Aristotelian syllogistic, Stoic propositional logic, medieval metalinguistic logic, and early modern developments, with an eye to their philosophical interpretations.[2][1]
  • Rhetoric & argumentation: cross‑disciplinary work linking classical rhetoric, argumentation theory, and contemporary critical thinking or feminist rhetoric, including non‑Western traditions.[3]
  • Religion & philosophy: projects on early Christianity and Judaism, philosophy and phenomenology of religion, and sociology of religion, supported by dense, topic‑specific bibliographies.[4]

If you want, I can next:

  • Map concrete research strategies (e.g., “how to use these four sites to build a literature review on formal ontology and its relation to logic”), or extract and organize key ontological/logical/rhetorical schools and authors into a working reading plan.

Footnotes

  1. 1. https://www.ontology.co
  2. 2. https://www.historyoflogic.com
  3. 3. https://www.historyofrhetoric.com
  4. 4. https://www.bibliograqphia.co

 

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