Aristotle's work De Interpretatione (the Latin title by which it is usually known) or On Interpretation (Greek Περὶ Ἑρμηνείας or Peri Hermeneias) is one of the earliest extant philosophical works in the Western tradition to treat the relationship between linguistics and logic in something like a comprehensive, explicit, and formal way. The contemporary philosophical discipline of hermeneutics borrows a little from this fountainhead, but more specifically turns to the question of interpreting texts.
The work begins by analyzing simple categoric propositions, and draws a series of basic conclusions on the routine issues of classifying and defining basic linguistic forms, such as simple terms and propositions, nouns and verbs, negation, the quantity of simple propositions (primitive roots of the quantifiers in modern symbolic logic), investigations on the excluded middle (what to Aristotle isn't applicable to future tense propositions — Problem of the futures contingents), and on modal propositions.
The first five or six chapters deal with names and words of language, the succeeding six chapters with propositions and simple propositions, including the topics of negation and quantity. The last three chapters deal with modalities.
De Interpretatione is (the second) part of Organon, Aristotle's collected works on logic.
See also
External links
- Text of On Interpretation, as translated by E. M. Edghill
- Sea Battle Hub, a tutorial introduction to the discussion of the truth status of future events from De Interpretatione 9.
- Logic Museum translation of Boethius' Latin version of De Interpretatione.