
Galen: Introduction to Logic
Oxford University Press
Will be published approx. on 26. May 2026
Other
Multiple copy pack
978-0-19-890612-4 (ISBN)
Description
The earliest surviving handbook of logic in Greek, the Institutio Logica was written in the second century CE by the famous Greek physician, Galen. This two-volume edition presents the Greek text with a new English translation and extensive commentary.
Volume I contains the Greek text with facing translation, preceded by an extensive editors' introduction. The text is based on a reappraisal of the one surviving medieval manuscript (Parisinus Supplement Grec 635), and the introduction discusses why a doctor such as Galen is writing about logic in the first place, lays out the logical theories contained in the work, considers the authenticity of the work, and explains the principles which guide the new edition. The appendix presents a new text and translation of the short and anonymous essay On all the Kinds of Syllogism, which offers unique testimony to Galen's theory of compound syllogisms.
Volume II contains a detailed and comprehensive commentary on the philosophical, historical, and textual questions raised by the text. It covers Galen's presentation of the different kinds of proposition, and his three kinds of syllogism: the hypothetical, the predicative, and the relational. The commentary explains how Galen's predicative and hypothetical syllogistic are related to but different from Aristotelian and Stoic logic, and it offers a new account of Galen's extraordinary innovation, relational syllogisms. A commentary on On all the Kinds of Syllogism offers a speculative reconstruction of Galen's theory of compound predicative syllogisms.
Volume I contains the Greek text with facing translation, preceded by an extensive editors' introduction. The text is based on a reappraisal of the one surviving medieval manuscript (Parisinus Supplement Grec 635), and the introduction discusses why a doctor such as Galen is writing about logic in the first place, lays out the logical theories contained in the work, considers the authenticity of the work, and explains the principles which guide the new edition. The appendix presents a new text and translation of the short and anonymous essay On all the Kinds of Syllogism, which offers unique testimony to Galen's theory of compound syllogisms.
Volume II contains a detailed and comprehensive commentary on the philosophical, historical, and textual questions raised by the text. It covers Galen's presentation of the different kinds of proposition, and his three kinds of syllogism: the hypothetical, the predicative, and the relational. The commentary explains how Galen's predicative and hypothetical syllogistic are related to but different from Aristotelian and Stoic logic, and it offers a new account of Galen's extraordinary innovation, relational syllogisms. A commentary on On all the Kinds of Syllogism offers a speculative reconstruction of Galen's theory of compound predicative syllogisms.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
ISBN-13
978-0-19-890612-4 (9780198906124)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Jonathan Barnes, FBA, is Emeritus Professor of Ancient Philosophy at Universite de Paris IV - Sorbonne. He was Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Oxford University from 1989 until 1994 and Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Geneva from 1994 until 2002. He previously taught at the University of Geneva. He was a Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford (1968-78), and a fellow of Balliol College, Oxford (1978-94), and is an Emeritus Fellow of Baliol College, Oxford. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1987 and elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1999.
Benjamin Morison obtained his BA in Literae Humaniores at Balliol College, Oxford, followed by the BPhil and DPhil under the supervision of Michael Frede. He was Jonathan Barnes' assistant at the University of Geneva followed by an appointment as British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1997-2000), and then Michael Cohen Fellow in Philosophy at Exeter College, Oxford (2001-9). He then moved to the Department of Philosophy at Princeton University, where he was Director of the Program in Classical Philosophy (2014-22),
and then Chair (2022-).
Benjamin Morison obtained his BA in Literae Humaniores at Balliol College, Oxford, followed by the BPhil and DPhil under the supervision of Michael Frede. He was Jonathan Barnes' assistant at the University of Geneva followed by an appointment as British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1997-2000), and then Michael Cohen Fellow in Philosophy at Exeter College, Oxford (2001-9). He then moved to the Department of Philosophy at Princeton University, where he was Director of the Program in Classical Philosophy (2014-22),
and then Chair (2022-).
Editor
Professor of PhilosophyProfessor of Philosophy, Princeton University
Emeritus Professor of Ancient PhilosophyEmeritus Professor of Ancient Philosophy, Universite de Paris IV - Sorbonne
Content
Volume I: Introduction, Text, Translation
Introduction
Analysis
Conventions
Text and Translation
Supplements
Appendix: Constantinos Minoides Mynas
Annexe: On all the Kinds of Syllogism
Volume 2: Commentaries
Commentaries
Appendixes
Introduction
Analysis
Conventions
Text and Translation
Supplements
Appendix: Constantinos Minoides Mynas
Annexe: On all the Kinds of Syllogism
Volume 2: Commentaries
Commentaries
Appendixes