- Organon - Wikipedia
The Organon (Ancient Greek: Ὄργανον, meaning "instrument, tool, organ") is the standard collection of Aristotle 's six works on logical analysis and dialectic
- Aristotle Organon And Other Works - Archive. org
Is it Porfyrios, student of Plotinos, version of Organon that is translated? A line drawing of the Internet Archive headquarters building façade A rotating activity indicator with three dots in the middle
- Aristotle’s Organon: Everything You Need to Know (2025)
Aristotle’s Organon is more than a logical manual—it is the foundation of rational civilization Its method, rooted in the nature of reality, provides a path from sense perception to scientific understanding, from argument to wisdom
- Organon | work by Aristotle | Britannica
In history of logic: Aristotle …works, known collectively as the Organon (“Tool”) The significance of the name is that logic, for Aristotle, was not one of the theoretical sciences These were physics, mathematics, and metaphysics Instead, logic was a tool used by all the sciences (To say that logic is not a science in this… Read More
- Aristotle - Works [Translated under the editorship of W. D. Ross]
1 Aristotle - Works [Translated under the editorship of W D Ross] Organon I – Categories 2 Organon II - On Interpretation 47 Organon III - Prior Analytics 81 Organon IV - Posterior Analytics 221 Organon V – Topics 326 Organon VI - On Sophistical Refutations 533
- Selected Works of Aristotle Organon: The Structure of . . . - SparkNotes
A summary of Organon: The Structure of Knowledge in Aristotle's Selected Works of Aristotle Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of Selected Works of Aristotle and what it means
- Organon - Wikisource, the free online library
Introduces Aristotle's conceptions of proposition and judgement, and treats contrarieties between them It contains Aristotle's principal contribution to philosophy of language
- Aristotle ON INTERPRETATION (Organon) : Full text, in English - 1 - ELLOPOS
Greek Philosophy: English translation of Aristotle ON INTERPRETATION (Organon), by E Edghill
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