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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/5646
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dc.contributor.authorHitchcock, Daviden_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-06-17T19:50:18Z-
dc.date.available2014-06-17T19:50:18Z-
dc.date.created2012-11-04en_US
dc.date.issued2002en_US
dc.identifier.otherphilosophy_coll/2en_US
dc.identifier.other1004en_US
dc.identifier.other3445891en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/5646-
dc.description<p>This article was presented at a conference (entitled 'Mistakes of Reason') in honour of John Woods held at the University of Lethbridge, April 19–21, 2002. Some corrections and additions were made in November 2012, in response to annotations by Erik Krabbe, for which I am grateful to him. Part of this paper formed the basis of my chapter entitled ‘The peculiarities of Stoic logic’ in Andrew D. Irvine and Kent A. Peacock, eds., Mistakes of Reason: Essays in Honour of John Woods (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2006), 224-242.</p>en_US
dc.description.abstract<p>I reconstruct Stoic propositional logic, from the ancient testimonies, in a way somewhat different than the 10 reconstructions published before 2002, building especially on the work of Michael Frede (1974) and Suzanne Bobzien (1996, 1999). In the course of reconstructing the system, I draw attention to several of its features that are rarely remarked about, such as its punctuation-free notation, the status of the premisses of an argument as something intermediate between a set and a sequence of propositions, the incorrectness of the almost universal translation of the Greek label for the primitives of the system as indemonstrable arguments, the probable existence of an extended set of primitives which accommodates conjunctions with more than two conjuncts and disjunctions with more than two disjuncts, the basis for the system’s exclusion of redundant premisses, and the reason why the hypothetical syllogisms of Theophrastus are not derivable in the system. I argue that, though sound according to its originator’s (Chrysippus’s) conception of validity, the system as reconstructed is not complete according to that conception. It is an open problem what one needs to add to the system in order to make it Chrysippean-complete, or even whether it is possible to do so without making it Chrysippean-unsound.</p>en_US
dc.subjectStoicismen_US
dc.subjectlogicen_US
dc.subjecthistory of logicen_US
dc.subjectStoic logicen_US
dc.subjectChrysippusen_US
dc.subjectreconstructionen_US
dc.subjectpropositional logicen_US
dc.subjectsoundnessen_US
dc.subjectcompletenessen_US
dc.subjectPhilosophyen_US
dc.subjectPhilosophyen_US
dc.titleStoic Propositional Logic: A New Reconstructionen_US
dc.typearticleen_US
Appears in Collections:Philosophy Publications

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