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Science/Math/Logic_and_Foundations
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'''Prior Analytics''' is [[Aristotle]]'s work on [[logic|deductive reasoning]], or the [[syllogism]]. It is part of his ''[[Organon]]'', his ''instrument'' or ''manual'' of [[logic]] and method.  It is the first part of the ''Analytics'' (the second being the ''Posterior Analytics''). The Prior Analytics gives an account of deduction in general, the Posterior Analytics deals with demonstrative science.  
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'''Prior Analytics''' is [[Aristotle]]'s work on [[logic|deductive reasoning]]. It contains his exposition of the 'syllogistic', where three important principles are applied for the first time in history:<ref>Bochenski p. 63</ref> the use of variables, a purely formal treatment of reasoning, and the use of an axiomatic system.  
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The book is part of a larger work called the ''[[Organon]]: ''an ''instrument'' or ''manual'' of [[logic]] and method.  It is the first part of the ''Analytics'' (the second being the ''Posterior Analytics''). Whereas the Prior Analytics gives an account of deduction in general, the Posterior Analytics deals with demonstrative science.
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Following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century, much of the ''Organon'' was lost in the Latin West, including the the ''Prior'' and ''Posterior'' analytics.  These works were not recovered in the West until the twelfth and early thirteenth century, together with the ''Topics'', and the ''Sophistical Refutations''. 
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Aristotle's theory of argumentation was fundamental to so-called ''traditional'' logic, which dominated Western thought about reasoning and argumentation until the late nineteenth century.  
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Following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century, much of the ''Organon'' was lost in the Latin West, including the the ''Prior'' and ''Posterior'' analytics.  These works were not recovered in the West until the twelfth and early thirteenth century together with the ''Topics'', and the ''Sophistical Refutations''. 
      
==Book I==
 
==Book I==
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== Book II==
 
== Book II==
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The second book concerns the powers of syllogisms. Aristotle shews, in twenty-seven chapters, how many different powerful arguments can be constructed from syllogisms, and what figures and modes are best adapted to each. He also gives suggestions both to the person prosecuting the argument, and to the one who defends. This suggests that Aristotle introduced in his own school the practice of syllogistical disputation, instead of the rhetorical and dialectical techniques which the Sophists used in earlier periods.
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The second book concerns the powers of syllogisms. Aristotle shows, in twenty-seven chapters, how many different powerful arguments can be constructed from syllogisms, and what figures and modes are best adapted to each. He also gives suggestions both to the person prosecuting the argument, and to the one who defends. This suggests that Aristotle introduced in his own school the practice of syllogistical disputation, instead of the rhetorical and dialectical techniques which the Sophists used in earlier periods.
    
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
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[[Category:Aristotelian logic]]
 
[[Category:Aristotelian logic]]
 
[[Category:Logic]]
 
[[Category:Logic]]
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[[Category:Science/Math/Logic_and_Foundations]]

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