Product Description
Traditonal Logic: Advanced Formal Logic, by Martin Cothran, is a continuation of Memoria Press’ Traditional Logic I. It covers the four figures of the traditional syllogism, the three forms of rhetorical arguments (called enthymemes), the three kinds of hypothetical syllogisms, the four kinds of complex syllogisms, as well as relational arguments.
- Do you know the Latin mnemonic verse used by the medieval schoolmen to memorize the 19 valid argument forms? (Our monks do. We can hear them chanting it now.)
- Which epistle contains Paul’s argument in the form of an Aristotelian sorites about foreknowledge and predestination?
- What argument form does Shakespeare use in Troilus and Cressida to justify social hierarchy?
- What was wrong with the famous dilemma used by Caliph Omar to justify the burning of the Alexandrian Library in 640 A.D.?
The book also includes a wealth of examples of arguments from the Bible, Lewis Carroll, Isaac Watts, St. Augustine, and Tertullian, as well as extended case studies of famous arguments throughout history, such as Rene Descartes’ famous enthymeme: “I think, therefore, I am”; C. S. Lewis’ disjunctive syllogism proving the deity of Christ; Plato’s hypothetical argument concerning the power of love; Christ’s conjunctive syllogism: “You cannot serve both God and mammon”; David Hume’s famous dilemma stating the problem of evil; the stoic Seneca’s justification of the virtuous life; and St. Thomas Aquinas’ cosmological argument for the existence of God.
This comprehensive but easy-to-use course includes:
Yes, our monks have scoured history and ransacked their formidable library of manuscripts to bring you the best logic program on the market. They have also slaved well into the night on countless occasions in their dedication to making classical education a practical reality for your students. Which reminds us—we’d better buy them some more candles or they will soon have a new appreciation for the term “the Dark Ages.”
Syllogisms Mnemonic
Several teachers have asked for a pronunciation guide to the William of Shyreswood’s syllogisms mnemonic in Chapter Two of Traditional Logic II. Martin Cothran has been kind enough to record a downloadable mp3 file:
Syllogisms Mnemonic Pronunciation Guide
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