Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ptsldigital.ukm.my/jspui/handle/123456789/775817
Title: L'Organon d'Aristote dans le monde arabe
Other Titles: Aristotle's Organon in the Arab world
Editors: Simon Van Den Vergh
Keywords: Aristotelian writings
Supreme law of reflection
Aristotelian syllogism
Model of deductive exposition
Issue Date: 1934
Description: Bahan dalam bahasa Perancis
Notes: Of all Aristotelian writings, the Organon is certainly the most studied and best known work; his fortune is considerable and his influence incomparable. Antiquity and the Middle Ages made it a code of thought and a supreme law of reflection; the Aristotelian syllogism was then the only scientific process to which the mind was subject. It was only in the Renaissance and modern times that it began to be harshly criticized and its methodological role challenged. However, these criticisms, if they rectified or completed Aristotelian logic, did not deprive it of all its value: the Early Analytics still remain the model of deductive exposition. Certainly, remarkable progress has been made in logic over the last fifty years, thanks to the work of mathematical logicians. But these works introduced into the heart of mathematical philosophy the consideration of the classes from which syllogistics arose, and established an intimate relationship between this philosophy and logical studies, “Pure logic and pure mathematics,” Russell rightly says, “form a one and the same thing*. Mathematical logic and that of Aristotle complement each other and are linked to each other; the last, without being perfect, contains an element of incontestable truth.
Pages: 312
Call Number: schachtB437.M3
Publisher: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin
Appears in Collections:Prof. J. Schacht Collection / Koleksi Prof. J. Schact

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