Port-Royal Logic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Port-Royal Logic, or Logique Port-Royal, is the common name of La logique, ou l'art de penser, an important textbook on logic first published anonymously in 1662 by Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole, two prominent members of the so-called Jansenist movement, centered around Port-Royal. Blaise Pascal likely contributed considerable portions of the text.

Written in the vernacular, it became quite popular and was in use up to the twentieth century, introducing the reader to logic, and exhibiting strong Cartesian elements in its metaphysics and epistemology (Arnauld, along with Hobbes, having been one of the main philosophers whose objections were published, with replies, in Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy). The Port-Royal Logic is sometimes cited as a paradigmatic example of traditional term logic.

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

[edit] External Links

In other languages