[lit-ideas] Re: [lit-ideas] Re: [lit-ideas] Le Pesanteur et la Gr âce

  • From: JulieReneB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2004 23:58:40 EDT

I don't think Weil totally bought into Aristotelian laws -- excluded  middle, 
non-contradiction, etc.  She had too much eastern philo under her  belt.  God 
she would have loved quantum physics.
 
Julie Krueger
========Original  Message========     Subj: [lit-ideas] Re: [lit-ideas] Le 
Pesanteur et la Gr âce  Date: 8/6/2004 10:57:42 PM Central Daylight Time  From: 
_Jlsperanza@xxxxxxxx (mailto:Jlsperanza@xxxxxxx)   To: 
_lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)   Sent on:    


In a message dated 8/6/2004 11:46:15 PM  Eastern Standard Time, Jlsperanza  
writes:
>  > "The  demonstrable  correlation of opposites is an image of  the
>  > transcendental
> > correlation  of   contradictories."


E. Holder writes: 

>I was totally  thinking the same thing.
>What Weil must  have in mind  is
>Aristotle's Square of  Opposition.  
>It's the  Square-of-Opposition-thing.   



Note that Weil seems to  be suggesting that 'opposites' are images of  
'contradictories'. In  traditional logical terminology, you can have your 
cake  (and 
eat it)  -- there is such a thing as a 'contradictory opposition', as  
opposed  
to other types (notably contrary, subcontrary, and subaltern)   opposition. 
It's 
all in the Square, of  course.

Cheers,

JL

"Opposition". OED

Logic. The  relation between two propositions which have the same  subject 
and  predicate but differ in quantity or quality, or both.
For   contradictory, contrary, subcontrary, and subaltern  opposition, see 
the  
first  terms. 

1599 T. BLUNDEVILLE Art of Logicke 67 (heading)  

Of the opposition of  Modals. 

1697 tr. F. Burgersdijck  Monitio Logica  I. xxxiii. 128 

True Opposition   afore-mentioned is either Contrariety or Contradiction. 

1788 T Reid  Aristotle's  Logic i. §3. 11 

The four kinds of  opposition of  terms are explained. 

1813-21 J. Bentham Fragm.  Ontol. in Wks.  (1843) VIII.  203 

Subalternation, viz.  logical  subalternation, opposition, and connexion, or 
the relation between  cause  and effect. 

1860 ABP. W. THOMSON Outl. Laws of  Thought  (ed. 5) 148 Opposition of 
Judgments is  the relation between any two  which have the same matter, but a 
different form. 

1896 J. G. HIBBEN  Logic (1905) xv. 128 In  the discussion concerning the 
opposition of  propositions, it was seen that the  truth of the particular 
does not  
imply the truth of the universal. 

1962 W. KNEALE & M. KNEALE  Devel. Logic (1984) iv. 182 Galen assumes that 
disjunctive statements  should, properly  speaking, involve complete 
opposition of 
the  disjuncts. 

1993 A. BROADIE Introd. Medieval Logic vii. 129 Propositions  related by 
opposition or equipollence have the same  categorematic  terms in the same   
order.


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