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Logic in Islamic philosophy

A Wisdom Archive on Logic in Islamic philosophy

Logic in Islamic philosophy

A selection of articles related to Logic in Islamic philosophy

More material related to Logic In Islamic Philosophy can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Logic In Islamic Philosop...
Logic in Islamic philosophy

ARTICLES RELATED TO Logic in Islamic philosophy

Logic in Islamic philosophy: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy

For after Muhammed's death, Islamic law placed importance on formulating standards of argument, which gave rise to a novel approach to argumentation in Kalam, but this approach was displaced by ideas from Greek philosophy with the rise of the Mutazilite philosophers, who valued highly Aristotle's Organon. The work of Greek influenced Islamic philosophers were crucial in the reception of Greek logic in medieval ...

See also:

History of logic, History of logic - Logic in China, History of logic - Logic in India, History of logic - Logic in Greece, History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy, History of logic - Medieval Logic, History of logic - Traditional Logic, History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Read more here: » History of logic: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy

Logic in Islamic philosophy: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Logic in Greece

In Greece, two main competing logical traditions emerged. Stoic logic traced its roots back to Euclid of Megara, a pupil of Socrates, and with its concentration on propositional logic was perhaps closer to modern logic. However, the tradition that survived to influence later cultures was the Peripatetic tradition which originated in Aristotle's collection of works known as the "Organon" or instrument, the first systematic Greek work on logic. Aristotle's examination of the syllogism bears interesting comparison with the Indian schema ...

See also:

History of logic, History of logic - Logic in China, History of logic - Logic in India, History of logic - Logic in Greece, History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy, History of logic - Medieval Logic, History of logic - Traditional Logic, History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Read more here: » History of logic: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Logic in Greece

Logic in Islamic philosophy: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Historically, Descartes, may have been the first philosopher to have had the idea of using algebra, especially its techniques for solving for unknown quantities in equations, as a vehicle for scientific exploration. The idea of a calculus of reasoning was also cultivated by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Leibniz was the first to formulate the notion of a broadly applicable system of mathematical logic. However, the relevant documents were not published until 1901 or remain unpublished to the present day, and the current understanding of the power of Leibniz's discoveries did not emerge un ...

See also:

History of logic, History of logic - Logic in China, History of logic - Logic in India, History of logic - Logic in Greece, History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy, History of logic - Medieval Logic, History of logic - Traditional Logic, History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Read more here: » History of logic: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Logic in Islamic philosophy: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Medieval Logic

"Medieval Logic" (also known as "Scholastic Logic") generally means the form of Aristotelian logic developed in medieval Occident throughout the period c 1200-1600. The tradition was developed through textbooks such as that by Peter of Spain (fl. thirteenth century), whose exact identity is unknown, who was the author of a standard textbook on logic, the Tractatus which was well known in Europe for many centuries. The tradition reached its high point in the fourteenth century, with the works of ...

See also:

History of logic, History of logic - Logic in China, History of logic - Logic in India, History of logic - Logic in Greece, History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy, History of logic - Medieval Logic, History of logic - Traditional Logic, History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Read more here: » History of logic: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Medieval Logic

Logic in Islamic philosophy: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Traditional Logic

"Traditional Logic" generally means the textbook tradition that begins with Antoine Arnauld and Nicole's Logic, or the Art of Thinking, better known as the Port-Royal Logic. Published in 1662, it was the most influential work on logic in England until Mill's System of Logic in 1825 [N4]. The book presents a loosely Cartesian doctrine (that the proposition is a combining of ideas rather than terms, for example) within a framework that is broadly derived from Aristotelian and medieval term logic. Between 1664 and 1700 there were ...

See also:

History of logic, History of logic - Logic in China, History of logic - Logic in India, History of logic - Logic in Greece, History of logic - Logic in Islamic philosophy, History of logic - Medieval Logic, History of logic - Traditional Logic, History of logic - The advent of modern logic

Read more here: » History of logic: Encyclopedia II - History of logic - Traditional Logic

More material related to Logic In Islamic Philosophy can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Logic In Islamic Philosop...



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