Volume 14 (2023)
Volume 13 (2022)
Volume 12 (2021)
Volume 11 (2020)
Volume 10 (2019)
Volume 9 (2018)
Volume 8 (2017)
Volume 7 (2016)
Volume 6 (2015)
Volume 5 (2014)
Volume 4 (2013)
Volume 3 (2012)
Volume 2 (2011)
Volume 1 (2010)
Author = Asadi, Mehdi
Number of Articles: 6
A Critique of Nabavi’s Specific Views in the Elements of Philosophical Logic
Volume 14, Issue 2 , January 2024
Abstract
Since the Elements of Philosophical Logic, written by Dr. Lotfollah Nabavi, is the first Persian book in the difficult area of philosophical logic, it is not flawless supposedly. So, we have tried in this paper to criticize the writer’s own specific views in the book. In the Tense logic chapter, ... Read MoreThe Mental Existence, Memory and Complicated Arguments
Volume 12, Issue 2 , September 2021, , Pages 1-29
Abstract
Some objections to the mental existence that are proposed by the western philosophers are almost unknown to Muslim philosophers and therefore have not received flawless response yet. For example, the complicated formulae objection, being one of the most important and difficult of them, says that since ... Read MoreExternal attribution of Secondary Intelligibles; The case study of Absolute Non–Existent Paradox
Volume 6, Issue 2 , September 2015, , Pages 1-36
Abstract
In Islamic logic and philosophy usually is said, as a rule, that the attribution of logical secondary inteligibles is totally subjective. This paper shows that sometimes some Muslim thinkers, in practice, have violated this rule unintentionally, in the discussion of absolute non–existent paradox, ... Read MoreA Resolution to the Absolute Non–Existent Paradox
Volume 5, Issue 2 , September 2014, , Pages 1-30
Abstract
external world and in the mind as well) paradox, so many solutions have been suggested: The difference in the intension and extension and its equivalent; the difference in the battī and lā–battī and its equivalent; and so forth. Having a glance at the incorrectness of these resolutions, the ... Read MoreThe Roots of the Absolute Non-Existent Paradox in Greek Philosophy
Volume 5, Issue 1 , March 2014, , Pages 1-30
Abstract
For Different thinkers, throughout history, ‘The unknowable non-existent’ has had different meanings. However, despite these differences, the ordinary absolute non-existent in Muslim philosophy (ma‘dūm muṭlaq; non-existent in both the external world and in the mind), can be ... Read MoreA Critique of the Paper "the Paradox of Informing from Absolute Unknown: Analyzing the Concept of ‘Information" ‘.
Volume 4, Issue 1 , March 2013, , Pages 1-43