Chrysippus’ counterargument against the Master Argument: a reappraisal

Q2 Arts and Humanities
SATS Pub Date : 2018-11-27 DOI:10.1515/sats-2018-2001
Mauro Nasti De Vincentis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract It is widely held that as a nego suppositum, Chrysippus’ response to Diodorus Cronus’ Master Argument is that the impossible “this man has died” follows from the possible “Dio has died”. A principal claim of this article is that Chrysippus was not actually committed, against Diodorus, to the tenet that there are deductions and conditionals whereby from the possible the impossible follows. I argue that this is most likely part of a Chrysippean exemplum fictum of a real dialectical discussion and it merely reflects a Chrysippean dialectical strategy, a merely instrumental agreement (συγχώρησις) with Diodorus on the admissibility of some single-premised arguments. As historical evidence for my conjecture I highlight two key passages by Sextus Empiricus which help to understand that Chrysippus’ real tenet was an ancient implicational counterpart of a deictic version of the Identity-Elimination Rule, whereas most likely, according to Diodorus the identitarian major premiss of this rule is redundant, so that it must be eliminated.
克里西普斯对主论证的反驳:重新评价
人们普遍认为,克里西普斯对狄奥多罗斯·克罗诺斯的主论证的回应是,从可能的“狄奥死了”推导出不可能的“这个人死了”。这篇文章的一个主要主张是,克里西普斯实际上并没有,与迪奥多鲁斯相反,承诺有演绎和条件,从可能到不可能。我认为,这很可能是希腊人真正辩证讨论的范例的一部分,它仅仅反映了希腊人的辩证策略,仅仅是与狄奥多鲁斯在某些单一前提论证的可接受性上的工具性协议(συγχώρησις)。作为我的猜想的历史证据,我强调了塞克斯图斯·恩里克乌斯的两段关键段落,这有助于理解克里西普斯的真正信条是一个古老的隐含对应的身份-消除规则的指示版本,而根据迪奥多鲁斯的说法,最有可能的是,这个规则的同一性主要前提是多余的,所以它必须被消除。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
SATS
SATS Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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