Syllogistic Logic and Mathematical Proof
Massimo Mugnai author Prof Paolo Mancosu author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:18th May '23
Should be back in stock very soon

Does syllogistic logic have the resources to capture mathematical proof? This volume provides the first unified account of the history of attempts to answer this question, the reasoning behind the different positions taken, and their far-reaching implications. Aristotle had claimed that scientific knowledge, which includes mathematics, is provided by syllogisms of a special sort: 'scientific' ('demonstrative') syllogisms. In ancient Greece and in the Middle Ages, the claim that Euclid's theorems could be recast syllogistically was accepted without further scrutiny. Nevertheless, as early as Galen, the importance of relational reasoning for mathematics had already been recognized. Further critical voices emerged in the Renaissance and the question of whether mathematical proofs could be recast syllogistically attracted more sustained attention over the following three centuries. Supported by more detailed analyses of Euclidean theorems, this led to attempts to extend logical theory to include relational reasoning, and to arguments purporting to reduce relational reasoning to a syllogistic form. Philosophical proposals to the effect that mathematical reasoning is heterogenous with respect to logical proofs were famously defended by Kant, and the implications of the debate about the adequacy of syllogistic logic for mathematics are at the very core of Kant's account of synthetic a priori judgments. While it is now widely accepted that syllogistic logic is not sufficient to account for the logic of mathematical proof, the history and the analysis of this debate, running from Aristotle to de Morgan and beyond, is a fascinating and crucial insight into the relationship between philosophy and mathematics.
This book holds significant interest for specialists in formal logic, particularly those with a penchant for historical analysis, as well as for scholars in philosophy with a focus on the methodology of sciences, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics. * Piotr Cholda, Computing Reviews *
This is an excellent book. It tackles a question that is of clear interest to anybody curious about the history of logic or mathematics, and does so in a way that is focused, persuasive, and rich with philosophical insights. It is remarkable that Mancosu and Mugnai have managed to answer such a broad question, in a comprehensive and accessible way, in a volume of this size. I thoroughlyrecommend it. * Wesley Wrigley, The Mathematical Gazette *
ISBN: 9780198876922
Dimensions: 240mm x 160mm x 20mm
Weight: 496g
240 pages