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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Ibn Sina. Shams C. Inati
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 0888442777, 9780888442772
ناشر: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
سال نشر: 1984
تعداد صفحات: 180
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 8 مگابایت
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در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Remarks and Admonitions, Part one: Logic (Mediaeval Sources in Translation) به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب ملاحظات و پندها، بخش اول: منطق (منابع قرون وسطی در ترجمه) نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 14
Abbreviations......Page 15
I. A General Word......Page 16
— 1. Conception and Assent......Page 20
— 2. Function and Use of Logic......Page 21
— 3. Logic as a Branch of Philosophy or Only as a Tool of It......Page 24
— 4. Preliminary Notes......Page 26
— 5. Single Expressions......Page 28
— 6. The Explanatory Phrase......Page 34
— 7. On Propositions......Page 36
— 8. The Proof......Page 49
— 9. On Demonstration......Page 53
III. A Word About the Translation......Page 58
REMARKS AND ADMONITIONS, PART ONE: LOGIC......Page 60
The First Method: Concerning the Purpose of Logic......Page 62
2. Remark: [Concerning the logician\'s need for taking into consideration universal language]......Page 63
3. Remark: [Concerning conception and assent]......Page 64
5. Remark: Concerning the expression as a sign for the concept......Page 65
7. Remark: Concerning single and composite expressions......Page 66
8. Remark: Concerning individual and universal expressions......Page 67
9. Remark: Concerning the essential, the concomitant accidental, and the separable accidental......Page 68
10. Remark: Concerning the constitutive essential......Page 69
11. Remark: Concerning the non-constitutive concomitant accidental......Page 70
14. Remark: Concerning the essential in another sense......Page 72
15. Remark: Concerning that which is stated as the answer to the question, \"What is it?\"......Page 73
16. Remark: Concerning the various types of that which is stated as the answer to the question, \"What is it?\"......Page 75
1. Remark: Concerning that which is stated as the answer to the question, \"What is it?\" as \"genus\"; and that which is stated as the answer to the question, \"What is it?\" as \"species\"......Page 79
3. Remark: Concerning the difference......Page 80
4. Remark: Concerning property and the common accident......Page 82
6. Remark: Concerning the description of the five [terms]......Page 84
7. Remark: Concerning definition......Page 85
8. Delusion and Admonition......Page 86
9. Remark: Concerning description......Page 87
10. Remark: Concerning the types of errors that occur in the identification of things by definition and description......Page 88
11. Delusion and Admonition......Page 90
1. Remark: Concerning the types of propositions......Page 92
2. Remark: Concerning affirmation and negation......Page 93
3. Remark: Concerning singularity, indefiniteness and definiteness......Page 95
4. Remark: Concerning the judgment of the indefinite proposition......Page 96
5. Remark: Concerning the definiteness and indefiniteness of conditional propositions......Page 97
7. Remark: Concerning equipollence and positiveness......Page 98
8. Remark: Concerning conditional propositions......Page 101
9. Remark: Concerning the dispositions that accompany propositions, and that give them specific judgments in definiteness and in other cases......Page 103
10. Remark: Concerning the conditions of propositions......Page 104
1. Remark: Concerning the matters of propositions......Page 105
2. Remark: Concerning the modes of propositions, and the difference between an absolute and a necessary proposition......Page 106
3. Remark: Concerning the mode of possibility......Page 110
4. Remark: Concerning principles and conditions for the modes......Page 112
5. Remark: Concerning the determination of the universal affirmative in the modes......Page 114
6. Remark: Concerning the determination of the universal negative in the modes......Page 116
7. Admonition: Concerning points of disagreement and agreement between the consideration of the mode and that of predication......Page 117
8. Remark: Concerning the determination of the two particular propositions and the modes......Page 118
9. Remark: Concerning the implication of modal propositions......Page 119
10. Delusion and Admonition......Page 120
A general word concerning contradiction......Page 122
1. Remark: Concerning the contradiction between absolute propositions, and the determination of the contradictory of absolute and concrete propositions......Page 124
2. Remark: Concerning contradiction in the remaining modal propositions......Page 127
3. Remark: Concerning the conversion of absolute propositions......Page 128
4. Remark: Concerning the conversion of necessary propositions......Page 130
5. Remark: Concerning the conversion of possible propositions......Page 131
1. Remark: Concerning propositions, with respect to those of them involving assent, and similar ones......Page 133
2. A follow-up......Page 143
1. Remark: Concerning the syllogism, induction and analogy......Page 144
2. Remark: Concerning specifically the syllogism......Page 146
3. Remark: Concerning specifically the conjunctive syllogism......Page 148
4. Remark: Concerning the various types of predicative conjunctive syllogisms......Page 149
5. The first figure......Page 150
6. Remark: Concerning the second figure......Page 152
7. Remark: Concerning the third figure......Page 156
1. Remark: Concerning conditional conjunctive syllogisms......Page 159
3. Remark: Concerning repetitive conditional syllogisms......Page 160
4. Remark: Concerning the syllogism by contradiction......Page 162
1. Remark: Concerning the various types of syllogisms, with respect to their matters and their production of assent......Page 163
2. Remark: Concerning the syllogisms and the demonstrative inquiries......Page 165
3. Remark: Concerning the subjects, principles, questions [and transference of demonstrations] in the sciences......Page 167
4. Remark: Concerning the correspondence of the sciences......Page 168
5. Remark: Concerning causal demonstration and factual demonstration......Page 169
6. Remark: Concerning the questions [in the sciences]......Page 170
The Tenth Method: On Fallacious Syllogisms......Page 173
Bibliography......Page 176
E......Page 178
P......Page 179
U......Page 180