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The Cratylus, one of Plato's most difficult and intriguing
dialogues, explores the relations between a name and the thing it
names. The questions that arise lead the characters to face a
number of major issues: truth and falsehood, relativism, the
possibility of a perfect language, the relation between the
investigation of names and that of reality, the Heraclitean flux
theory and the Theory of Forms. This is the first full-scale
commentary on the Cratylus and offers a definitive interpretation
of the dialogue. It contains translations of the passages discussed
and a line-by-line analysis which deals with textual matters and
unravels Plato's dense and subtle arguments, reaching a novel
interpretation of some of the dialogue's main themes as well as of
many individual passages. The book is intended primarily for
graduate students and scholars, both philosophers and classicists,
but presupposes no previous acquaintance with the subject and is
accessible to undergraduates.
This volume collects 22 essays on the history of logic written by
outstanding specialists in the field. The book was originally
prompted by the 2018-2019 celebrations in honor of Massimo Mugnai,
a world-renowned historian of logic, whose contributions on
Medieval and Modern logic, and to the understanding of the logical
writings of Leibniz in particular, have shaped the field in the
last four decades. Given the large number of recent contributions
in the history of logic that have some connections or debts with
Mugnai's work, the editors have attempted to produce a volume
showing the vastness of the development of logic throughout the
centuries. We hope that such a volume may help both the specialist
and the student to realize the complexity of the history of logic,
the large array of problems that were touched by the discipline,
and the manifold relations that logic entertained with other
subjects in the course of the centuries. The contributions of the
volume, in fact, span from Antiquity to the Modern Age, from
semantics to linguistics and proof theory, from the discussion of
technical problems to deep metaphysical questions, and in it the
history of logic is kept in dialogue with the history of
mathematics, economics, and the moral sciences at large.
This volume collects 22 essays on the history of logic written by
outstanding specialists in the field. The book was originally
prompted by the 2018-2019 celebrations in honor of Massimo Mugnai,
a world-renowned historian of logic, whose contributions on
Medieval and Modern logic, and to the understanding of the logical
writings of Leibniz in particular, have shaped the field in the
last four decades. Given the large number of recent contributions
in the history of logic that have some connections or debts with
Mugnai’s work, the editors have attempted to produce a volume
showing the vastness of the development of logic throughout the
centuries. We hope that such a volume may help both the specialist
and the student to realize the complexity of the history of logic,
the large array of problems that were touched by the discipline,
and the manifold relations that logic entertained with other
subjects in the course of the centuries. The contributions of the
volume, in fact, span from Antiquity to the Modern Age, from
semantics to linguistics and proof theory, from the discussion of
technical problems to deep metaphysical questions, and in it the
history of logic is kept in dialogue with the history of
mathematics, economics, and the moral sciences at large.
The Cratylus, one of Plato's most difficult and intriguing
dialogues, explores the relations between a name and the thing it
names. The questions that arise lead the characters to face a
number of major issues: truth and falsehood, relativism, etymology,
the possibility of a perfect language, the relation between the
investigation of names and that of reality, the Heraclitean flux
theory and the Theory of Forms. This full-scale commentary on the
Cratylus offers a definitive interpretation of the dialogue. It
contains translations of the passages discussed and a line-by-line
analysis which deals with textual matters and unravels Plato's
dense and subtle arguments, reaching a novel interpretation of some
of the dialogue's main themes as well as of many individual
passages. The book is intended primarily for graduate students and
scholars, in both philosophy and classics, but presupposes no
previous acquaintance with the subject and is accessible to
undergraduates.
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