Fallacies in the Arabic, Byzantine, Hebrew and Latin Traditions

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Bad arguments have never been in short supply. The scholarly interest they have elicited in recent years, on the other hand, is quite exceptional. Fallacy studies have become a well established and flourishing field of argumentation theory. Without notable exception, the ever-growing literature on argumentative failures suffer from a conspicuous lack of interest in Mediaeval fallacy theory – arguably the most creative stage in the whole history of argumentation theories. The standard story is that after Aristotle got off to a tentative start, the study of fallacies laid dormant until people at Port Royal and John Locke revived it in spectacular fashion. «Fallacies in the Arabic, Byzantine, Hebrew and Latin Traditions» will show that this narrative is misleading, if not altogether false. Free of boundaries or limitations imposed by differences in discipline, language and culture, the volume will provide ample and unambiguous record of the exegetical proficiency, technical expertise and argumentative savoir-faire typically displayed by mediaeval logicians jurists and theologians on issues whose complexity we underestimate to some extent – such as the problem of defining what a fallacy is or the pitfalls of linguistic expression. Working its way from the inside out within each mediaeval tradition and comparing mediaeval findings and lessons to contemporary views and trends, the volume will show where the potential for novelty and the rightful place of mediaeval theories of fallacies lies within contemporary argumentation studies.

Author(s): Leone Gazziero
Series: Ad argumenta, 4
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2024

Language: English
Pages: 269
City: Turnhout

Front Matter
Laurent Cesalli / Leone Gazziero / Charles H. Manekin /
Shahid Rahman / Tony Street / Michele Trizio. Fallacies in the Arabic, Byzantine, Hebrew and Latin Traditions. Introduction
Sten Ebbesen. Are the Fallacies Topoi?
Costantino Marmo. The Fallacia Consequentis between Term Logic and Sentence Logic in its Medieval Reception
Leone Gazziero. “Qui imperitus est vestrum, primus calculum omittat”. Aristotelis Sophistici Elenchi 1 in the Boethian Tradition
Irene Caiazzo. Theology, Fallacious Reasoning and Heresy on the Borders of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries: Some Remarks on the Fallaciae in theologia and Amalricians
Melpomeni Vogiatzi. Byzantine Treatments of Fallacy: The Reception of Aristotle’s Account
Shahid Rahman / Walter Edward Young. Outside the Logic of Necessity: Deontic Puzzles and ‘Breaking’ Compound Causal Properties in Islamic Legal Theory and Dialectic
Hassan Rezakhany. A Forgotten Mereological Paradox
Charles H. Manekin. Fallacies and Biblical Exegesis –The Case of Joseph ibn Kaspi
Aviram Ravitsky. Fallacies in Rabbinical Thought, in Medieval Jewish Philosophy, and in the Treatise on Talmudic Methodology by Abraham Elijah Cohen
Yehuda Halper. Are Zeno’s Paradoxes of Motion Fallacies? Evidence from the Hebrew Aristotelian Logical Tradition