Stoic Logic, 2nd Edition
โ Scribed by Benson Mates
- Publisher
- University of California Press
- Year
- 1961
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 154
- Edition
- 2nd
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Preface......Page 3
Contents......Page 5
1: The Problem......Page 7
2: Stoic Authors to Be Considered......Page 11
3: Sources for Stoic Logic......Page 14
1: Exposition of the Stoic Theory......Page 17
2: Comparison with Modern Theories......Page 25
1: Propositions......Page 33
2: Truth......Page 39
3: Necessity and Possibility......Page 42
1: Implication......Page 48
2: Disjunction......Page 57
3: Conjunction and the Other Logical Connectives......Page 60
4: The Interdefinability of the Connectives......Page 61
1: Definition and Classification......Page 64
2: The Five Basic Types of Undemonstrated Argument......Page 73
3: The Principle of Conditionalization......Page 80
4: The Analysis of Nonsimple Arguments......Page 83
5: Invalid Arguments; Paradoxes......Page 88
1: The Judgments of Prantl and Zeller......Page 92
2: The Confusion about ฯฯ
ฮฝฮทฮผฮผฮญฮฝฮฟฮฝ......Page 96
3: Conclusion......Page 99
Sextus Empiricus......Page 101
Diogenes Laertius......Page 118
Galen......Page 122
Miscellaneous......Page 128
Appendix B. Glossary......Page 138
Bibliography......Page 143
Passages cited or translated......Page 147
General index......Page 151
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Overall, the book is ok but it does not teach you the concepts in detail. If you never had this class before, this book is not for you. It has a lot of exercises but little instruction. If you have a good instructor this book can work, otherwise this book will bring more frustration. JT
Overall, the book is ok but it does not teach you the concepts in detail. If you never had this class before, this book is not for you. It has a lot of exercises but little instruction. If you have a good instructor this book can work, otherwise this book will bring more frustration. JT
Logic Primer presents a rigorous introduction to natural deduction systems of sentential and first-order logic. The text is designed to foster the student-instructor relationship. The key concepts are laid out in concise definitions and comments, wi