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Tópicos (México)

versión impresa ISSN 0188-6649

Resumen

CAMPOS BENITEZ, Juan Manuel. El octágono medieval de Oposición para oraciones con predicados cuantificados. Tópicos (México) [online]. 2013, n.44, pp.177-205. ISSN 0188-6649.

The traditional Square of Opposition consists of four sentence types. Two are universal and two particular; two are affirmative and two negative. Examples, where "S" and "P" designate the subject and the predicate, are: "every S is P", "no S is P", "some S is P" and "some S is not P". Taking the usual sentences of the square of opposition, quantifying over their predicates exhibits non-standard sentence forms. These sentences may be combined into non-standard Squares of Opposition (an Octagon in this case), and they reveal a new relationship not found in the usual Square. Medieval logicians termed "disparatae" sentences like "every S is some P" and "some S is every P", which are neither subaltern nor contrary, neither contradictory nor subcontrary. Walter Redmond has designed a special language L to express the logical form of these sentences in a precise way. I will use this language to show how Squares of Opposition, standard and non-standard, form a complex network of relations which bring to light the subtleties contained in this traditional doctrine.

Palabras llave : square of opposition; predicates; logical quantifiers; medieval logic.

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