Logic 2 Volume Set
After more than a decade teaching ancient Greek history and philosophy at University College, Oxford, British philosopher and political theorist Bernard Bosanquet (1848–1923) resigned from his post to spend more time writing. He was particularly interested in contemporary social theory, and was involved with the Charity Organisation Society and the London Ethical Society. Much of his work focused on the place of logic in philosophy, especially its role in metaphysical thought - the area where he is considered to have made his most important intellectual contributions. In 1888 he published this two-volume study of logic, addressing a variety of questions relating to logic, and drawing from the work of Hegel (1770–1831) in his examination. Volume 1 considers the questions of knowledge, judgment and measurement. Volume 2 discusses inference, which, he argues, has a similar essence to that of judgment, but is used to 'mediate' reality.
Product details
No date availableMultiple copy pack
9781108040211
672 pages
218 × 140 × 40 mm
0.9kg
Table of Contents
- Volume 1: Preface
- Introduction
- Book I. The Judgment:
- 1. Of judgment and judgment-forms in general
- 2. Quality and comparison
- 3. Quantity and proportion
- 4. Measurement (continued) - abstract quantity
- 5. Singular and universal judgment
- 6. Universal judgment (continued)
- 7. Negation, opposition, and conversion
- 8. Disjunction and the statement of chances
- 9. Modality. Volume 2: Book II. Inference:
- 1. The nature of inference
- 2. Enumerative induction and mathematical reasoning
- 3. Analogy
- 4. Scientific induction by perceptive analysis
- 5. Scientific induction by hypothesis. Generalization
- 6. Concrete systematic inference
- 7. The relation of knowledge to its postulates
- Index.