LOGIKE – LOGOS (ΛΟΓΙΚΉ – ΛΌΓΟΣ) AND JUS DICERE. A PHILOSOPHICAL OUTLINE FOR A JURIDICAL LOGICS Cover Image

LOGIKE – LOGOS (ΛΟΓΙΚΉ – ΛΌΓΟΣ) AND JUS DICERE. A PHILOSOPHICAL OUTLINE FOR A JURIDICAL LOGICS
LOGIKE – LOGOS (ΛΟΓΙΚΉ – ΛΌΓΟΣ) AND JUS DICERE. A PHILOSOPHICAL OUTLINE FOR A JURIDICAL LOGICS

Author(s): Codrin Codrea
Subject(s): Logic, Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of History
Published by: Editura Arhipelag XXI
Keywords: Heraclitus; stoics; theory of forms; pneuma; Plato and Aristotle;

Summary/Abstract: This text is situated on a certain germinal ambiguity of the word logics, insofar caught only as the dominant meaning of the term, that of autonomous discipline with a certain object of investigation, is, without being removed, initially suspended to make room for polysemy, subsequently blurred in order to restore the semantic fullness that occurred on the etymological pathway. Logike (λογική) shows up as a derivative of the Greek logos (λόγος), in this descent the opening to one's own, inner fragments of the meaning of the word becoming possible. Finding out logike (λογική) in the immediate vicinity of logos (λόγος) and the fact that the former comes to call in Greek thinking a particular type of reflection sovereignly oriented towards logos (λόγος) in its many forms fuse the semantic flows of both words, which irrigate each other's meaning, becoming simultaneously navigable by placing them in a single riverbed. Joining the term jus-dicere to the couple logike (λογική)-logos (λόγος), opens a new semantic field and sheds new light on what juridical logics can fully cover, revealing its full vocation.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 25
  • Page Range: 274-280
  • Page Count: 7
  • Language: English