Description |
1 online resource (440 p.) |
Contents |
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Preface -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- 1. Philosophical and Methodological Foundations for Studying the History of Logic of Various Religious and Philosophical Schools -- 1.1 Structuralist Approach to the History of Logical Knowledge and the Archaeology of Logic -- 1.1.1 Problem Setting -- 1.1.2 Periods of the Indian Philosophy According to the Hegelian Approach -- 1.1.3 Schelling versus Hegel -- 1.1.4 Mathematical Centrism in the History of Logic -- 1.1.5 Conclusions -- 1.2 Main Logical Traditions within the Framework of Archaeology of Logic |
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1.2.1 Problem Setting -- 1.2.2 Rabbi Ishmael's Thirteen Hermeneutic Rules as a Kind of Logic -- 1.2.3 Some Proto-Logical Aspects of Mozi's Hermeneutics -- 1.2.4 Sign-inferences in the Greek and Buddhist Logic -- 1.2.5 Conclusions -- 1.3 Analysis and Classification of Approaches to the Definition of Logical Competence -- 1.3.1 Problem Setting -- 1.3.2 Logical Psychologism and Its Criticism -- 1.3.3 Cognitive Biases and Informal Logic -- 1.3.4 Lateral Inhibition and Lateral Activation as a Biological Mechanism of Logical Operations -- 1.3.5 Cognitive Biases of Humans and Animals |
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1.3.6 Logical Competence as a Kind of Social Practice -- 1.3.7 Conclusions -- 2. Some Ways of Discovering Logical Competence in Social Practices -- 2.1 Methodology for Determining the Structural Similarity of Different Mythological Cycles of Different Peoples -- 2.1.1 Problem Setting -- 2.1.2 Homotopy Equivalence between Two Myths -- 2.1.3 Conclusions -- 2.2 Methodology for Determining the Structural Similarity of Different Ontological Pictures of Different Philosophical Traditions -- 2.2.1 Problem Setting -- 2.2.2 Comparison of Plato's Phaedrus with the Pure Land Sūtras |
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2.2.3 Fragments from Lost Greco-Buddhist Texts -- 2.2.4 Some Direct Evidences of Influences of the Greek Astrology on the Indian One at the Time of the Early Sūtras of Mahāyāna -- 2.2.5 Conclusions -- 2.3 Methodology for Identifying the Origins and Genesis of Logical Competence through the Detection of Structural Similarity in Reasoning -- 2.3.1 Problem Setting -- 2.3.2 The Silk Road in the Classical Antiquity -- 2.3.3 Legal Documents in Bactrian and Sogdian -- 2.3.4 Pragma-Dialectical Analysis of Legal Documents in Akkadian, Aramaic, Greek, and Bactrian -- 2.3.5 Conclusions |
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3. Conditions and Reasons for the Emergence of Logical Competence in the Sumerian-Akkadian Culture -- 3.1 Formation of Strict Norms of Logical Argumentation in the Sumerian and Akkadian Legal Culture -- 3.1.1 Problem Setting -- 3.1.2 Archaeology of Logic for Mesopotamian Texts -- 3.1.3 Court Proceedings in Dispute Resolutions since Ur III -- 3.1.4 Examples of Logical and Rhetorical Arguments from Business Correspondence -- 3.1.5 Examples of Logical Arguments from Legal Proceedings -- 3.1.6 Conclusions |
Notes |
Description based upon print version of record |
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3.2 Explication of Logical Inferences from Judicial Acts in Akkadian, Aramaic, and Ancient Greek |
Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9781000871074 |
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100087107X |
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