MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday November 14, 2024
Jump to navigationJump to search
1,234 bytes added
, 13:05, 31 December 2008
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| + | {| border=1 cellpadding=10" |
| + | !valign = top width=45%|Latin |
| + | !valign = top width=55%|English |
| + | |- valign = top |
| + | || <a name = "c1"><b>Pars I CAP. 1. DE DEFINITIONE TERMINI ET EIUS DIVISIONE IN GENERALI</b> || ON THE DEFINITION OF 'TERM', AND OF THE DIVISION OF IT IN GENERAL |
| + | |
| + | |- valign = top |
| + | || (i) Omnes logicae tractatores intendunt astruere quod argumenta ex propositionibus et propositiones ex terminis componuntur. Unde terminus aliud non est quam pars propinqua propositionis. Definiens enim terminum Aristoteles, I Priorum, dicit: 'Terminum voco in |
| + | quem resolvitur propositio, ut praedicatum et de quo praedicatur, vel apposito vel diviso esse vel non esse'. |
| + | || All those who deal with logic aim to show that arguments are put together from propositions and propositions out of terms. Wherefore, a term is nothing other than a neighbouring part of a proposition. For in defining a term Aristotle (<i>Prior Analytics I</i>) says 'I call a 'term', that into which a proposition is analysed, such as a predicate and what it is predicated of, either by putting [terms] together to say what is the case (<i>esse</i>), or by separating them, to say what is not the case' [N1]. |
| + | |} |
| + | |
| {| border=1 cellpadding=10" | | {| border=1 cellpadding=10" |
| !valign = top width=45%|Latin | | !valign = top width=45%|Latin |