AE (Aristotle-Euler) Diagrams: An Alternative Complete Method for the Categorical Syllogism
Mario Savio is widely known as the first spokesman for the Free Speech Movement. Having spent the summer of 1964 as a civil rights worker in segregationist Mississippi, Savio returned to the University of California at a time when students throughout the country were beginning to mobilize in support...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Notre Dame journal of formal logic 1998-10, Vol.39 (4), p.581-599 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mario Savio is widely known as the first spokesman for the
Free Speech Movement. Having spent the summer of 1964 as a civil
rights worker in segregationist Mississippi, Savio returned to the
University of California at a time when students throughout the
country were beginning to mobilize in support of racial justice and
against the deepening American involvement in Vietnam.
His moral clairty, his eloquence, and his democratic style of
leadership inspired thousands of fellow Berkeley students to protest
university regulations that had severely limited political speech and
activity on campus. The nonviolent campaign culminated in the
largest mass arrest in American history, drew widespread faculty
support, and resulted in a revision of university rules to permit
political speech and organizing. This significant advance for student
freedom rapidly spread to countless other colleges and
universities across the country. Mario Savio went on to become a
college teacher of physics, logic, and philosophy, to speak and
organize in favor of immigrant rights and affirmative action and against U.S.
intervention in Central America. He died on November 6, 1996, in the
middle of a struggle against California State University fee hikes
that hurt working-class students.
Savio had submitted this article to the Notre Dame Journal of
Formal Logic before he died. Final revisions were made by Philip
Clayton with the assistance of Mario's colleagues at Sonoma State
University. As reader for the Journal, George Englebretsen
not only provided an extensive commentary on the article--much of
which has been incorporated here--but also assisted in the difficult
task of making revisions without changing the substance of Mario's
style or thought.
It is fitting that this, Savio's final publication, would be pedagogical
in orientation. For him, moral considerations were no less pertinent
in logic than in philosophy's less abstract fields. The usual student
confusion with Venn diagrams led him to develop the new pictorial
device presented in the following pages, which he believed was more
sensitive to user psychology. It is hard to miss the political
overtones in Savio's closing worry that in Venn diagrams
"information of real significance may occasionally appear hidden and
distorted." The decision by the Notre Dame Journal of Formal
Logic to publish this piece posthumously is a testimony that logic,
no less than other fields of philosophy, can be a tool of free speech
and political change |
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ISSN: | 0029-4527 1939-0726 |
DOI: | 10.1305/ndjfl/1039118872 |