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- catalog abstract "That traditional methods do not suffice was pointed out years back by Jan Salamucha in his pioneering work on the ex motu argument of St. Thomas, in The New Scholasticism XXXII (1958) but first published in 1934. Although modern logic is a comparatively young science, he noted, it provides us "with many new and subtle tools for exact thinking. To reject them is to adopt the attitude of one who stubbornly insists on traveling by stage-coach, though having at his disposal a train or airplane ... The great philosophers of the past did not rely exclusively on those weak logical tools left to them by their predecessors. The very problems themselves and their own scientific genius forced them to build rational reconstructions that went far beyond those of their time.".
- catalog contributor b1431501.
- catalog created "c1980.".
- catalog date "1980".
- catalog date "c1980.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1980.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "On truth, justification, and metaphysical method -- On God and primordiality -- Some Thomistic properties of primordiality -- The human right to good and evil -- Fact, feeling, faith, and form -- On the logic of the psyche in Plotinus -- A Plotinic theory of individuals -- On philosophical ecumenism : a dialogue -- Some musings on Hartshorne's methodological maxims -- On the eliminability of God's consequent nature -- Of spiders and bees : one logic, not two -- On intensions and possible worlds -- On virtual-class designation and intensionality -- On the language of music theory -- On worldmaking and some aesthetic relations -- Some comments on the second antinomy -- Toward a constructive idealism -- On Peirce's analysis of events -- The strange costume of Peirce's Hegelism : a dialogue -- On meaning, protomathematics, and the philosophy of nature.".
- catalog description "That traditional methods do not suffice was pointed out years back by Jan Salamucha in his pioneering work on the ex motu argument of St. Thomas, in The New Scholasticism XXXII (1958) but first published in 1934. Although modern logic is a comparatively young science, he noted, it provides us "with many new and subtle tools for exact thinking. To reject them is to adopt the attitude of one who stubbornly insists on traveling by stage-coach, though having at his disposal a train or airplane ... The great philosophers of the past did not rely exclusively on those weak logical tools left to them by their predecessors. The very problems themselves and their own scientific genius forced them to build rational reconstructions that went far beyond those of their time.".
- catalog extent "xiii, 331 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0873954432".
- catalog identifier "0873954440 (pbk.)".
- catalog issued "1980".
- catalog issued "c1980.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Albany : State University of New York Press,".
- catalog subject "B29 .M3678".
- catalog subject "God.".
- catalog subject "Logic, Modern.".
- catalog subject "Philosophy.".
- catalog subject "Science Philosophy.".
- catalog subject "Values.".
- catalog tableOfContents "On truth, justification, and metaphysical method -- On God and primordiality -- Some Thomistic properties of primordiality -- The human right to good and evil -- Fact, feeling, faith, and form -- On the logic of the psyche in Plotinus -- A Plotinic theory of individuals -- On philosophical ecumenism : a dialogue -- Some musings on Hartshorne's methodological maxims -- On the eliminability of God's consequent nature -- Of spiders and bees : one logic, not two -- On intensions and possible worlds -- On virtual-class designation and intensionality -- On the language of music theory -- On worldmaking and some aesthetic relations -- Some comments on the second antinomy -- Toward a constructive idealism -- On Peirce's analysis of events -- The strange costume of Peirce's Hegelism : a dialogue -- On meaning, protomathematics, and the philosophy of nature.".
- catalog title "Primordiality, science, and value / R. M. Martin.".
- catalog type "text".