UID:
almahu_9949700901302882
Format:
1 online resource (xiii, 143 pages)
ISBN:
9789004321120
Series Statement:
Philosophia antiqua, v. 87
Content:
This volume traces the development of Aristotle's hypothetical syllogistic through antiquity, and shows for the first time how it later became misidentified with the logic of the rival Stoic school. By charting the origins of this error, the book illuminates elements of Aristotelian logic that have been obscured for almost two thousand years, and raises important issues concerning the distinctive roles of semantic and syntactic analysis in theories of logical consequence. The first chapters of the book deal with the original Aristotelian hypothetical syllogistic, and explain how Aristotle's later followers began to conflate it with Stoic logic. The final chapters examine in detail the two most crucial surviving treatments of the subject, Boethius's On hypothetical syllogisms and On Cicero's Topics , which carried this conflation into the Middle Ages.
Note:
Based on the author's thesis (doctoral)--University of Toronto.
,
Preliminary material -- THE ARISTOTELIAN BACKGROUND -- THE GREEK COMMENTATORS ON ARISTOTLE -- BOETHIUS: ON HYPOTHETICAL SYLLOGISMS -- BOETHIUS: ON CICERO'S TOPICS -- REFERENCES -- GENERAL INDEX -- INDEX LOCORUM -- PHILOSOPHIA ANTIQUA.
Additional Edition:
Online version: Speca, Anthony. Hypothetical syllogistic and Stoic logic. Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2001
Language:
English
Keywords:
History.