This sabbatical's output is just the section on Aristotelian logic. I haven't tried to be particularly innovative. I took the books by Hurley, Cohen et al., and Baronett to be my "cohort group," and surveyed them to determine what instructors were doing, and to establish that none of the methods here were anyone's intellectual property. I wanted to be sure that everything is just standard industry practice, so to speak. The table below shows how many pages our book and the texts in the cohort group to the two major topics covered, categorical statements and categorical syllogisms. More importantly, it shows the number of exercises the texts gives for each topic. Basically, my page count is in the same range as the cohort group, but I have 100 more exercises than even Hurley's book, which has a hell of a lot of exercises. Page totals do not include glossaries, bibliographies, etc.
Categorical Statements | Categorical Syllogisms | Total | |
---|---|---|---|
Hurley | 64 pages, 318 exercises. | 52 pages, 107 exercises | 116 pages, 425 exercises |
Baronett | 52 pages, 243 exercises. | 70 pages, 188 exercises | 122 pages, 431 exercises |
Copi et al.: | 41 pages, 130 exercises. | 82 pages, 231 exercises | 123 pages, 361 exercises |
Loftis et al.: | 44 pages, 274 exercises | 69 pages, 297 exercises | 113 pages, 571 exercises |
The excerpts I posted will be chapters 10 and 11 of the final text. They appear as chapters 1 and 2 because I didn't compile the full textbook. Also, all cross references to chapters not in this compilation of the text will appear as question marks. The glossary, bibliography, and table of contents only covers these two chapters
These are my authors notes on my Chapter 10 and Chapter 11..
These documents compare the coverage of texts in the cohort group for categorical statements and categorical syllogisms.