Logic and general theory of science: lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Cham, Switzerland
Springer
[2019]
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Schriftenreihe: | Collected works / Edmund Husserl
volume 15 |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | L, 437 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9783030145286 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS Translator’s Introduction......................................................... xxi LOGIC AND GENERAL THEORY OF SCIENCE, LECTURES 1917/18, WITH SUPPLEMENTARY TEXTS FROM THE FIRST VERSION OF 1910/11 SECTION I FUNDAMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE DEMARCATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF FORMAL LOGIC 1. Acquiring the Idea of Pure Logic as Pure Theory of Norms for Knowledge................................. § 1. Logic as Purely Theoretical Self-Knowledge of the Understanding............................................... § 2. The Historically First Concept of Logic: Logic as Theory of Norms for Rational Thinking............. § 3. The Difference Between Psychology of Knowing and Normative Logic. The Contrast Between Natural Law and Logical Norm............................... § 4. The Absolute Validity of Logical Norms. The Ambiguous Nature of Talk of Understanding: Understanding as Psychic Faculty and Understanding as Idea of a Non-empirical Kind of Normality.................................................... § 5. The Truth Motive in Psychologism.......................... a) Excursus into the Historical and Factual Background of Psychologism.............................. Ե) Logic as Technology of Human Knowing Must Be Grounded in Psychological Knowledge........................................................... 3 3 6 9 13 17 17 21
x 2. Contents § 6. ТЪе Difference Between Logic as Pure, ExistenceFree Theory of Norms for Knowledge and Its Application to Human Knowing. Exposing the Fundamental Error of Psychologism....................... 22 Clarification of the Ideas Thought-Act and Thought-Meaning.................................................................. 29 § 7 The Outline for the Following Reflections. The Noematic Perspective as Turning Toward What Is Known as Such. Apophantic Logic, Universal Formal Ontology, and the Idea of a Pure Theory of Science..................................... § 8. The Pivotal Point of All Theory of Knowledge: The Recognition of Ideas as Atemporal, Supraempirical Objects............................................ § 9. The Noetic Theory of Norms as Theory of Norms of Judgments in the Sense of Judgment-Idea. The Difference Between Judging and Judgment as Idea of Judging.................................................... § 10. The Judgment-Idea, Proposition, and State-of-Affairs........................................................ a) Judgment as Proposition as Opposed to Judgment as Judgment-Idea. Noetic and Noematic Reflection.................................... b) The Distinction Between Proposition and State-of-Affairs. The Objectifying Way of Looking at States-of-Affairs, the Reflective Way of Looking at Propositions........ c) The State-of-Affairs (as Supposed and as Actual) as the Objectivity Given in the Judging. The Proposition as What Is Judgingly Supposed as Such................................................. d) The Analogy of the Judgment with Acts
Essentially Related to It: The Difference Between Objective Supposing and Actually Being 29 31 37 41 41 45 46 49
Contents xi e) The Meaning of the Statement as Idea of Judging or as Proposition............................... 53 §11. Proposition and Proposition-Thought. The Propositional Content as What Is Common in Affirmative Judging and in Mere Propositional Imagining.................................................................. 56 § 12. Proposition, Propositional Matter, and Positing Quality. The Qualifications as a Kind of Assessment. The Position-Taking Consciousness in the Broadest Sense............................................... 58 § 13. Questions of Reason and Rightness Belong to All Position-Taking Acts as Qualifyings of Propositional Matter................................................ 62 § 14. The Essential Parallelisms in the Different Intellectual Kinds of Consciousness and Broadening the Concept of Proposition. The Universal Dominance of Affirmative Statements and the Primacy of Truth-Logic........... 64 § 15. Extensions of the Meaning Concept and Definition of the Idea of a Thought-Act................. 67 a) The Partial Acts of the Propositional Thought-Act. The Concept of the Nominal........ 67 b) The Relationship of the Overall Quality to the Qualities of the Partial Acts..................... 70 c) Combining Simple Predications to New Judgments. Conclusive Determination of the Idea of a Thought-Act............................... 72 § 16. The Doxic Qualities Are Also Found in the Sphere of Intuition. Extension of the Concept of Meaning to Acts of Intuition: The Intuited as Such...................................................................... 74 § 17. The
Difference Between Meaning- and CognitiveEssence with Respect to Determining the Idea of the Thought-Act. The Generic Makeup of Matter as Thought-Matter................................... 76
XII Contents 3. Formal Logic and Theory of Forms of Meanings........ 81 § 18. Logic as a Priori Discipline of Thinking in General Formal logic with its two levels and as basic piece of an a priori theory of science ................................................................ 81 § 19. Characterization of Formal Logic and Its Essential Problems.............................................. 84 a) The Theory of Forms of Meanings as a Theory of Forms of Possible Thought-Matter in General............................................................ 84 b) The Problem of the Compatibility of the Quality of the Overall Matter with the Qualities of the Part-Matter............................... 86 c) Restriction of the Theory of Forms of Meanings to Statements. Non-affirmative Qualities as Form-Concepts............................... 90 d) The Forms of the Intentionally of Thinking Are Mirrored in the Forms of ThoughtMeanings. The Shortcomings of Logic Up Until Now. The Task of a Logical Theory of Thinking.......................................................... 92 SECTION II THE SYSTEMATIC THEORY OF FORMS OF MEANINGS AND OF JUDGMENT. ITS PROBLEMS AND THE PARTICULAR NATURE OF THE THEORIES TO BE FORMULATED IN IT 4. The Most General Characteristics of the Structure of Meanings........................................................ § 20. Independent and Dependent Meanings................. § 21. The Idea of Law-Governed Compound-Forms...... § 22. Unsinn-Widersinn. In the Theory of Forms of Meaning, There Is No Talk of Truth or Falsehood... § 23. General
Distinctions................................................ a) Primitive-Compound Independence................. b) Composition-Decomposition............................. § 24. Syntactical Stuff and Syntactical Form.................... a) Propositional, Nominal, and Adjectival Syntagmas............................................................ 99 99 102 105 108 108 110 112 112
Contents b) ТЪе Syntactical Form of the WholeComponent and That of the Subordinated Components........................................................ § 25. Nucleus-Stuff and Nucleus-Form. The Formation in the Syntagma.-Contrast with the Traditional Understanding of Term, Concept, and Presentation...................................................... § 26. The Fundamental Distinction Between Primitive Nuclei in Full-Nuclei and Empty Nuclei................. a) The Difference Between Full-Nuclei and Empty Nuclei Is the Original Source of the Distinction Between Definite and Indefinite Object-Reference of Judgments......................... b) The Empty Presentation “Something”-What Is Specifically Formal in Formal Logic................... c) The Empty Presentation “This” as an Empty Thought-Form..................................................... xiii 115 117 121 121 123 126 Preliminary Remarks About the Systematic Theory of Forms of Meanings........................................ 129 § 27. The Formal Theory of Meaning Stays Within the Sphere of Mathematical Generality.................. a) The Concept of Meaning-Form as Configuration-Idea.............................................. b) The Method of Iterable Operation..................... § 28. Going Back to the Basic Form of Propositionally Simple Judgments.................................................... a) The Classification of Judgments into Propositionally Simple and Propositionally Complex Judgments............................................ b) The Components of Propositionally Simple Judgments: Dependent-
Independent Syntagmas............................................................ c) Propositionally Simple Judgments Must Be Formed Out of At Least Two SimpleIndependent Meanings in Order to Be Full Thought-Meanings....................................... 129 129 131 135 135 136 138
XIV 6. Contents Propositionally Simple Judgments................................ 141 § 29. The Basic Form of Propositionally Simple Judgments and Iteratile Operations of Negation and Affirmation........................................................ a) The Traditional Understanding of the Negative and Affirmative Quality of Categorical Judgments............................................................ b) Plain Assertion as Opposed to Negation and Affirmation................................................... § 30. The Plain Is Between Two Nouns as Distinguished from the Relational “Is Identical” and from the Adjectival Is.............................................................. § 31. The Iterable Operation of Attribution.................... § 32. The Introduction of the Empty Presentation “Something” into the Judgment-Matter................. a) The Something as quidam and as “Something in General”.......................................................... b) The Subsuming Predicate “an a”....................... c) Propositional Functions and Their Quantification as Particular or Universal Judgment-Matter................................................ d) Function-Judgments and Definite Judgments with Empty Places.............................................. e) Criticism of the Traditional Classificaţion of Judgments from the Point of View of Quantity .. § 33. Steps of Form-Formation......................................... § 34. In Terms of Meaning, Plural Judgments Are Propositionally Simple Judgments with Multifold Subjects or
Predicates............................. § 35. The Nominalization of Pluralities-The Origin of the Concept of Cardinal Number........................ § 36. Arithmetic Number-Presentations.......................... a) Cardinal Numbers as a Basic Kind of Pure-Logical General-Nuclei. (Original Cardinal Numbers and Associative Constructions)..................................................... b) The Difference Between Cardinal Numbers and Numbers....................................................... 141 141 143 146 148 149 149 151 152 156 157 158 159 163 166 166 169
Contents § 37 The Indefiniteness of the Left-Open Continuation of Connections Lying in the “And So Forth’.’ The Origin of the Concept of Set............................. § 38. The Thought-Form of “Again and Again”............... § 39. The Totality-Thought-It Does Not Contain the Thought of Generality, of the Universal in General. Surrogative Thinking............................. § 40. Existential Judgments and Impersonals.................. a) The Issue of Existential Judgments. In Conflict with Brentano..................................................... b) Further Discussion of the Problems of Functional-Judgments. The Equivalence of Particularized (and Universal) Functions and Positive (and Negative) Existential Propositions......................................................... c) Differentiating Between Categorical Judgment and Categoroid Function.................................... d) The Concept of Inexistence. The Impersonals (Definite Categorical or Functional) Are Existential Propositions in This Sense of Existence......................................................... e) Obtaining Existential Judgments with a Definite Term. They Are Categoroid Functional-Propositions with a Quasi-Subject Without Positing.................................................. f) Dispute with Bolzano’s Thesis: Existential Judgments as Categorical Judgments About Presentations....................................................... g) The Logically Different Proposition-Forms Converging Under the Heading “Existential
Proposition”......................................................... 7. xv 171 173 175 181 181 188 192 194 196 202 212 The Propositionally Complex Judgment-Forms.......... 219 § 41. Conjunction and Disjunction.................................. 219 § 42. The Hypothetical and Causal Connecting of Propositions into the Judgment Unit...................... 222 a) Definite Hypothetical Judgments and Hypothetical Functional-Judgments.................. 222
XVI Contents b) The Terms of Conditionality in Hypothetical and in Causal Judgments.................................... 226 8. The Cardinal Differences Within the Field of Meaning............................................................................... 229 § 43. The Modal Distinctions............................................ 229 a) The Possibility-Statement in the Sense of Seeming and in the Sense of Not-BeingExcluded............................................................... 230 b) Necessity as Apodicticity and Relative Necessity. Its Relationship to Laws.................... 232 § 44. The Idea of Law. An Apodictic Necessity Corresponds Only to Pure Laws in the Individual Case........................................................ 234 § 45. a) The Distinction Between Judgments in Pure Concept-Judgments and Factual Judgments (A Priori and Empirical Judgments)................... 237 b) Concept-Truths-Factual Truths. AnalyticSynthetic Truths.................................................... 240 § 46. The Laws of Apophantic Logic and Those of Formal Ontology................................................. 243 a) Purely-Grammatical Laws and Laws of the Apophantic Theory of Validity........................... 243 b) The Formal-Ontological Laws as Equivalent Rephrasing of the Apophantic Laws of Validity and as Laws for Objects That Arise Through Nominalization of Dependent PropositionForms.................................................................... 245 c) Disagreement with Kant..................................... 247 9. Inferences and Proofs as Judgment-
Units.................. 249 § 47 Clarification of the Essence of the Logical Theory of Inferences from the Highest Vantage Points........................................................... 249 a) The Modality of an Inferential Judgment Must Have the Value of Being Genuinely Apodictic............................................................. 249 b) Direct and Indirect Hypothetical Relations....... 250
Contents c) Imperfect and Perfect Hypothetical or Causal Apodictic Judgments............................... d) Eliminative Inferences........................................ e) Purely Formal and Material-Analytic and Synthetic Inferences..................................... f) Propositional Inferences..................................... § 48. The Concept of Logical Equivalence...................... § 49. The Concept of Proof............................................... § 50. Deductive Theory as a Web of Proofs. Analytic and Synthetic Deductive Theories. The Systematic Construction of Analytics Is a Matter for Mathematicians........................................................ 10. The Field of the Theory of Probability........................ § 51. The Difficulty in Grounding the Theory of Probability............................................................ § 52. Possibility as Presumability. Precedence and Gradation in the Area of Presuming. Indifference as Absolute Questionableness................................. § 53. Seventeenth Century Mathematics’ Discovery: In Certain Spheres Probabilities Can Be Transformed into Exact Quantities......................... xvii 251 253 254 256 256 258 260 263 263 264 267 SECTION III THE GENERAL IDEA OF THE THEORY OF SCIENCE 11. The Pure Theory of Manifolds as Science of the Possible Forms of Deductive Theories in General..... 271 § 54. The Science-Theoretical and Science-Practical Function of Analytics............................................... § 55. The Nature of Deductive Theory, Taking Euclidean Geometry as an
Example....................... § 56. Taking Definite Deductive Disciplines Back to Their Discipline-Forms. Equiform Disciplines. Inclusion and Exclusion of Discipline-Forms. Operating with Imaginaries..................................... § 57. The Construction of Complete Discipline-Forms Starting with the Euclidean Manifold..................... 271 274 277 281
XVIII Contents § 58. The Universal Scope of Possible Formalization. Notwithstanding, the Theory of Manifolds Is Itself Subject to Analytic Laws............................ 285 § 59. The Tasks of an Ideal Mathesis Universalis. The Theory of Manifolds as the Consummation of All Purely Categorial Knowledge....................... 288 12. Broadening the Idea of the Theory of Science Beyond Analytics................................................................... 291 § 60. Logic as Formal Theory of Meaning and as Formal Ontology Is the First Manifestation of the Idea of the Theory of Science. The Most Universal Concept of Theory of Science................ 291 § 61. The Science-Theoretical Nature of the SyntheticFormal Ontology of Nature. Kant’s “Pure Natural Science”........................................................ 293 § 62. The Task of Defining the Highest Regions of Being Starting from the Idea of What Exists Individually in General, as Well as of Unfolding the Regional Basic Concepts in the Regional Categories. The Concept of Region......................... 295 § 63. The Ontology of Spiritual Being as a Priori Science of Spirit and Consciousness........................ 297 § 64. The Ontology of the Communal Spirit as a Priori Essence-Analysis of the Collective Spiritual Life and of Its Objective Correlates......... 299 § 65. Formal and Material Axiology and Practice............ 302 a) Mere Value-Takings ( Wertnehmungen) as Grounded Acts. Esthetic Values and Ethical Values...................................................... 302 b) Values as Founded Objects
Constituting Themselves in Value-Taking. The PsychologicalNaturalistic Misinterpretations........................... 306 c) The Ontology of Values: Formal and Synthetic a Priori in the Axiological Sphere....... 309 d) The Relationship Between Axiology and Practice................................................................ 314 e) The Different Levels of Generality of Axiological-Practical Reflection......................... 316
Contents xix f) The Possibility of Scientific Constructions of Value-Configurations as Constructions of Ideas of Possible Nature Realized from Axiological Points of View, as well as Possible Consciousnesses and Intellectual Communities....................................................... 318 g) The Call for a Genuine Science with Regard to the Axiological and Practical Spheres of Being. Against a Falsely Delimited and Naturalistically Misinterpreted Idea of Reason............................................................. 321 h) The General Schema of the Kantian Transcendental Questions Is Also Applicable Outside the Specific Genus of Epistemological Ideals.................................................................... 323 13. The Idea of Noetics......................................................... § 66. Noetic Reflections in the Sciences as CriticalMethodical Reflections in the Service of the Primary Interest in Things....................................... § 67. General Noetics as Systematically Formal Theory of Justification of Knowledge..................... § 68. The Radical Problem of Evidenz and of Givenness.................................................................. a) In What Respect Does Purdy Immanently Evident Judging Differ from Non-evident Judging? What Does Givenness for the Different Regions and Categories of Objectivities Look Like?.................................... b) How Can Evidenz Secure Truth for Us?............. c) Triumphing Over the Psychological Feeling and Index Theory of Evidenz.............................. d) Evidenz-
Consciousness as Consciousness of Givenness of the State-of-Affairs Itself. All Regions of Objectivities Need Their Own Investigations into the Possibility of Their Givenness............................................... 329 329 334 339 339 340 341 344
XX Contents § 69. The Solution of the Problem of Reason Requires a Systematic Phenomenology of Consciousness and Its Consciousness-Correlates. Transformation of All Knowledge into Absolute, Metaphysical Knowledge. Noetics as Theory of Science in the Highest Sense........................................................... 346 Supplementary Texts.............................................................. 349 Appendix I (to Sections I-III): For the 1910/11 Lecture. Concluding Remarks and Plans ....................... 349 Appendix II (to §1) cLogic as Philosophical Science of Knowledge, as First Philosophy ................................. 350 Appendix III (§6): distinction Between Explanatory Theory and Theory of Knowledge .................................. 354 Appendix IV (to §9): Supplement to the General Characterization of the Noetic Theory of Justification. The Ideas of Judgment-Events Relevant from the Viewpoint of the Theory of Knowledge ........................ 359 Appendix V (to §12): The Enigma of “Intentionality” .............................................................. 360 Appendix VI (to Section II): On the Content of the Theory of Forms ............................................................. 361 Appendix VII (to §20): independent and Dependent Ideas ................................................................................ 362 Appendix VIII (to §26): On the Theory of Primitive Full-Nuclei ...................................................................... 366 Appendix IX (to §30): Plain Predicating and Actually Identifying Predicating
................................................... 369 Appendix X (to §34): The Conjunction of a Nominal Presentation with the Negation of Another Nominal Presentation .................................................................... 370 Appendix XI (to §40): 01d Pages on the Problems of Propositionally Simple Judgments ............................. 371 a) On the Meaning of Existential Judgments. The Difference Between Act-Analytical and Meaning-Analytical Investigations.............. 371 b) Quarrel with Assumptions of the Traditional Theory of Judgment............................................ 374
Contents xxi c) Comprehensive Overview of the Main Differences in the Sphere of Propositionally Simple Judgments................................................ 378 Appendix XII (to §40a): Logically Incomplete Meanings ......................................................................... 380 Appendix XIII (to §40 b): Propositional Function and Proposition ............................................................... 383 Appendix XIV (to §40 f): The Nominalizing Conversion of Matter. “Being” as Predicate ................. 384 Appendix XV (to §45 b): Analytic and Synthetic Truths. Concept-Truths and Truths of Matters-of-Fact ............. 385 Appendix XVI (to §50): dndirectness Pertains to the Essence of Theorems, Directness of Insight to the Essence of Principles ........................................... 390 Appendix XVII (Original Version of §§60-62): The Problems That Make a Systematic Investigation of Entirely Different Regions of Possible Being and Possible Science Necessary ............................................ 393 Appendix XVIII (to §64): 1he Problem of Reason .... 403 a) The Ideal Structure of the Realm of the Spirit: Individual Experience and the Thought-Acts Logically Processing These, on the One Hand, the Experienced Objects and Thought Truths, on the Other Hand.............................................. 403 b) The Idea of Reason in Relationship to the Correlation Between Consciousness and What One Is Conscious of as the Subject of a New Science. Ontology as Science Directed Straight to That Itself Needs Reason-Theoretical
Elucidation............................................ 406 Index. 413
|
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author | Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 |
author2 | Hill, Claire Ortiz 1951- |
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author_GND | (DE-588)118555006 (DE-588)154545945 |
author_facet | Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 Hill, Claire Ortiz 1951- |
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author_sort | Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 |
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genre | (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content |
genre_facet | Quelle |
id | DE-604.BV046130677 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:36:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783030145286 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-031511070 |
oclc_num | 1128841414 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-20 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-20 DE-12 |
physical | L, 437 Seiten |
publishDate | 2019 |
publishDateSearch | 2019 |
publishDateSort | 2019 |
publisher | Springer |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Collected works / Edmund Husserl |
spelling | Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 Verfasser (DE-588)118555006 aut Logik und allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 Edmund Husserl ; translated by Claire Ortiz Hill, Paris, France Cham, Switzerland Springer [2019] L, 437 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Collected works / Edmund Husserl volume 15 Ideengeschichte 1910-1911 gnd rswk-swf Logic Philosophy and science Continental Philosophy Wissenschaftsphilosophie (DE-588)4202787-1 gnd rswk-swf Logik (DE-588)4036202-4 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content Logik (DE-588)4036202-4 s Wissenschaftsphilosophie (DE-588)4202787-1 s Ideengeschichte 1910-1911 z DE-604 Hill, Claire Ortiz 1951- (DE-588)154545945 trl Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-3-030-14529-3 Edmund Husserl Collected works volume 15 (DE-604)BV009443836 15 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031511070&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Husserl, Edmund 1859-1938 Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 Logic Philosophy and science Continental Philosophy Wissenschaftsphilosophie (DE-588)4202787-1 gnd Logik (DE-588)4036202-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4202787-1 (DE-588)4036202-4 (DE-588)4135952-5 |
title | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 |
title_alt | Logik und allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie |
title_auth | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 |
title_exact_search | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 |
title_full | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 Edmund Husserl ; translated by Claire Ortiz Hill, Paris, France |
title_fullStr | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 Edmund Husserl ; translated by Claire Ortiz Hill, Paris, France |
title_full_unstemmed | Logic and general theory of science lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 Edmund Husserl ; translated by Claire Ortiz Hill, Paris, France |
title_short | Logic and general theory of science |
title_sort | logic and general theory of science lectures 1917 18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910 11 |
title_sub | lectures 1917/18 with supplementary texts from the first version of 1910/11 |
topic | Logic Philosophy and science Continental Philosophy Wissenschaftsphilosophie (DE-588)4202787-1 gnd Logik (DE-588)4036202-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Logic Philosophy and science Continental Philosophy Wissenschaftsphilosophie Logik Quelle |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031511070&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV009443836 |
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