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Making logic practical
pp. 150-164
Résumé
In the American school, traditional logic was viewed as inadequate. Dewey, for example, calls for a "logic of discovery, not a logic of argumentation, proof and persuasion".1 He agrees with Bacon that learning consists in the growth of knowledge, and as such cannot be accomplished by syllogistic demonstration of what is already known. Classic logic is inherently conservative, emphasizing and falling back on the authority and intellectual achievements of the past.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Rockmore Tom, Gavin William J., Colbert James G., Blakeley Thomas J (1981) Marxism and alternatives: towards the conceptual interaction among Soviet philosophy, neo-thomism, pragmatism, and phenomenology. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 150-164
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-8495-0_13
Citation complète:
Rockmore Tom, Gavin William J., Colbert James G., Blakeley Thomas J, 1981, Making logic practical. In T. Rockmore, W. J. Gavin, J. G. Colbert & T.J. Blakeley Marxism and alternatives (150-164). Dordrecht, Springer.