Deductive Logic St George 9788826419848 Books
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One critic, who was kind enough to look at this book in manuscript, recommended me to abandon the design of Publishing it, on the ground that my logic was too like all other logics; another suggested to me to cut out a considerable amount of new matter. The latter advice I have followed; the former has encouraged me to hope that I shall not be considered guilty of wanton innovation. The few novelties which I have ventured to retain will, I trust, be regarded as legitimate extensions of received lines of teaching. My object has been to produce a work which should be as thoroughly representative of the present state of the logic of the Oxford Schools as any of the text-books of the past. The qualities which I have aimed at before all others have been clearness and consistency. For the task which I have taken upon myself I may claim one qualification-that of experience; since more than seventeen years have now elapsed since I took my first pupil in logic for the Honour School of Moderations, and during that time I have been pretty continuously engaged in studying and teaching the subject.
Deductive Logic St George 9788826419848 Books
Unfortunately for the reader, the most enjoyable parts of this lethally dull book come at the end. Most of this book reads like a 19th century textbook, which it appears to have been in fact, and it is written as most textbooks are written, to fulfill some sort of pedagogical need on the part of the author and not to provide enjoyment for the reader. Indeed, the author assumes a familiarity with Latin that was far more true of the Britain of his day than it is of contemporary readers. A book like this represents a major lost opportunity in that the subject matter would have allowed for a book that was both educational as well as entertaining, but the execution of this book offers little enjoyment to any reader, and must have been a difficult text for even the most devoted students of deductive logic in late 19th century England.The contents of this book, for the most part are straightforwardly discussed and are a paragon of order and structure. The book is divided into several parts, starting with terms, propositions, then moving on to inferences (including syllogisms and fallacies), which takes up the majority of the book, and then closing with a set of exercises for students to follow. Included in the main body of the book are thirty chapters with almost 900 sequentially numbered subchapters. The complex nature of this book’s content would be much easier to manage in modern days of desktop publishing, but at the time they would have required an obsessive attention to detail, perhaps the same sort of obsessive detail that is required to demonstrate several different means of determining all of the valid moods in the four figures of syllogisms. Those readers who persist until the end of the book will be rewarded with some closing material on fallacies that is thought provoking and deeply interesting, but only the most ornery and stubborn of readers will get that far.
One of the more thought-provoking aspects of this book, aside from the fact that it seems perversely dull, is the fact that the book discusses over and over again that logic does not determine truth but merely determines whether an argument obeys certain rules. This is a lesson that deserves to be remembered. All too often it is easy for people to mistake a mastery of rules for validity and assume that this means their arguments bear the imprinteur of truth, when this is mistaken and fallacious. To give but only one example, the widespread belief in the neo-Darwinian synthesis despite its lack of empirical support springs from local fallacies that exclude the existence of a designer because there is a great desire to escape any sort of implication of God existing and having the authority to command how to live. Helpfully, this book also contains some helpful examinations of logical fallacies against Christianity, which was, to say the least, unexpected and pleasant, even if it was after much slogging through tedious definitions and explanations.
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Tags : Deductive Logic [St. George] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. One critic, who was kind enough to look at this book in manuscript, recommended me to abandon the design of Publishing it,St. George,Deductive Logic,St. George William Joseph Stock,8826419841,PHILOSOPHY Logic
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Deductive Logic St George 9788826419848 Books Reviews
dry and printing is very small. Not an inviting book
Boring and complicated read but what can you expect from logic?
Critical thinking is a lost skill today.
This is a great book on deductive logic. I have never yet come across a book that so clearly conveys the ideas of logic, despite the fact that the english being used is not modern.
IMPORTENT STOCK TRADING IDEAS
Not what I expected but good.
Unfortunately for the reader, the most enjoyable parts of this lethally dull book come at the end. Most of this book reads like a 19th century textbook, which it appears to have been in fact, and it is written as most textbooks are written, to fulfill some sort of pedagogical need on the part of the author and not to provide enjoyment for the reader. Indeed, the author assumes a familiarity with Latin that was far more true of the Britain of his day than it is of contemporary readers. A book like this represents a major lost opportunity in that the subject matter would have allowed for a book that was both educational as well as entertaining, but the execution of this book offers little enjoyment to any reader, and must have been a difficult text for even the most devoted students of deductive logic in late 19th century England.
The contents of this book, for the most part are straightforwardly discussed and are a paragon of order and structure. The book is divided into several parts, starting with terms, propositions, then moving on to inferences (including syllogisms and fallacies), which takes up the majority of the book, and then closing with a set of exercises for students to follow. Included in the main body of the book are thirty chapters with almost 900 sequentially numbered subchapters. The complex nature of this book’s content would be much easier to manage in modern days of desktop publishing, but at the time they would have required an obsessive attention to detail, perhaps the same sort of obsessive detail that is required to demonstrate several different means of determining all of the valid moods in the four figures of syllogisms. Those readers who persist until the end of the book will be rewarded with some closing material on fallacies that is thought provoking and deeply interesting, but only the most ornery and stubborn of readers will get that far.
One of the more thought-provoking aspects of this book, aside from the fact that it seems perversely dull, is the fact that the book discusses over and over again that logic does not determine truth but merely determines whether an argument obeys certain rules. This is a lesson that deserves to be remembered. All too often it is easy for people to mistake a mastery of rules for validity and assume that this means their arguments bear the imprinteur of truth, when this is mistaken and fallacious. To give but only one example, the widespread belief in the neo-Darwinian synthesis despite its lack of empirical support springs from local fallacies that exclude the existence of a designer because there is a great desire to escape any sort of implication of God existing and having the authority to command how to live. Helpfully, this book also contains some helpful examinations of logical fallacies against Christianity, which was, to say the least, unexpected and pleasant, even if it was after much slogging through tedious definitions and explanations.
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