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  1. Hegel’s Dialectics - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Jun 3, 2016 · “Hegel’s dialectics” refers to the particular dialectical method of argument employed by the 19th Century German philosopher, G.W.F. Hegel (see entry on Hegel), which, like other …

  2. Aristotle’s Logic - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Mar 18, 2000 · The correspondence with dialectical method is straightforward: rhetorical speeches, like dialectical arguments, seek to persuade others to accept certain conclusions on …

  3. Aristotle - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Sep 25, 2008 · The suggestion that we often use dialectic when engaged in philosophical exchange reflects Aristotle’s supposition that there are two sorts of dialectic: one negative, or …

  4. Aristotle’s Rhetoric - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    May 2, 2002 · For even though dialectic has no definite subject, it is easy to see that it nevertheless employs a consistent method (both in Plato’s and Aristotle’s understanding of …

  5. Hegel’s Social and Political Philosophy - Stanford Encyclopedia of ...

    Jun 3, 2021 · Hegel argues his positions in a dialectical way that is not linear and designed to show how seemingly different perspectives can have their opposition somehow dissolve within …

  6. Recognition (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)

    Aug 23, 2013 · O’Neill, J. (ed.), 1996, Hegel’s Dialectic of Desire and Recognition: Texts and Commentary, Albany: State University of New York Press. O’Neill, S., and N. Smith, (eds.), …

  7. Self-Locating Beliefs - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    We’ll start by looking at some examples of self-locating communication, then present the model of communication that’s so appealing when we’re not working with self-locating belief. Then we’ll …

  8. Argument and Argumentation - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Plato promotes a different style of argumentative discourse: instead of the long speeches of the rhetoricians, and following his teacher Socrates (see entry on Socrates), he favors dialogical …

  9. Dialogical Logic - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Feb 4, 2022 · Dialogical logic is a dialogue-based approach to logic and argumentation rooted in a research tradition that goes back to dialectics in Greek Antiquity, when problems were …

  10. Paradoxes and Contemporary Logic - Stanford Encyclopedia of …

    Oct 16, 2007 · Besides the model-theoretic side, axiomatic investigations of truth and related paradoxes have become increasingly important since the seminal papers of Friedman and …