Enrolment options
Trivium-Philosophy-Theology 1: Formal Logic This class
emphasizes the structure of logical reasoning, the form that right
reasoning takes. It begins with an Aristotelian account of the three
acts of the intellect: simple apprehension, judgment, and reasoning.
These acts are verbalized as terms, propositions, and syllogisms,
respectively. With this background, the students learn the four types of
logical proposition, the square of opposition for understanding the
ways in which those propositions are related, and the rules for
combining propositions into syllogisms without error. The course
concludes with the consideration of various complex forms of the
syllogism and numerous case studies of famous arguments. The second half
of the year emphasizes the practice of "translating" and analyzing
"ordinary language arguments."