Even in Logic, Laws may Admit of Exceptions. A Survey of some Important Medieval Insights
Articles
Wolfgang Lenzen
University of Osnabrück, Germany,
Published 2024-12-23
https://doi.org/10.15388/Problemos.Priedas.24.3
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Keywords

Medieval logic
Connexive logic
Aristotle’s Theses
Impossible antecedents
Necessary consequents

How to Cite

Lenzen, W. (2024) “Even in Logic, Laws may Admit of Exceptions. A Survey of some Important Medieval Insights”, Problemos, pp. 27–44. doi:10.15388/Problemos.Priedas.24.3.

Abstract

In this paper it is shown that many medieval logicians recognized that certain ‘laws’ hold only under certain restrictions. In particular, the basic principles of so-called connexive logic – as they had been put forward by Aristotle, Boethius, and Abelard – hold only for possible, or self-consistent, antecedents, or for non-necessary, or contingent, consequents. A similar restriction applies to the ‘law’ – possibly put forward by Chrysippus – that each proposition is compatible with itself.

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