Logic and the Imperial Stoa

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The main argument of this book, against a prevailing orthodoxy, is that the study of logic was a vital - and a popular - part of stoic philosophy in the early imperial period. The argument relies primarily on detailed analyses of certain texts in the Discourses of Epictetus. It includes some account of logical 'analysis', of 'hypothetical' reasoning, and of 'changing' arguments.
Written both for historians and for philosophers, and presupposing no logical expertise, this is an important contribution to the history of philosophy in the early imperial period.

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Preliminary material
页码: I–XI
THE DECLINE OF LOGIC
页码: 1–11
SENECA
页码: 12–23
EPICTETUS
页码: 24–125
CONCLUSION
页码: 126–127
BIBLIOGRAPHY
页码: 147–153
INDEXES
页码: 155–158
INDEX OF PERSONS
页码: 159–161
Index of Topics
页码: 162–165
Jonathan Barnes, F.B.A., is Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Geneva. He has published widely on many aspects of ancient thought.
'...if anyone actually could write the book with this title, it would be Jonathan Barnes...'
Ancient historians, students of ancient philosophy, and those interested in logic and its history.
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