The Snake and the Fox: An Introduction to Logic
Routledge (1999)
| Abstract | The Snake and the Fox offers students a new and exciting way to look at and understand logic. Mary Haight uses graphics to tell the story of how logic works, and why it works the way it does. This introductory text uses easy to understand language for the student who has no prior understanding of logic or philosophy. The author includes some discussion on the philosophical theory underlying the logic: not just how to do it, but why it takes the form it does. The Snake and the Fox is user-friendly, interactive, uses questions with answers, and has graphics which will easily guide any student coming to logic for the first time. | |||||||||
| Keywords | Logic | |||||||||
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| Buy the book | $135.00 new $135.00 direct from Amazon Amazon page | |||||||||
| Call number | BC108.H18 1999 | |||||||||
| ISBN(s) | 0415166934 9780415166935 | |||||||||
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| Through your library | Configure |
John P. Burgess (2009). Philosophical Logic. Princeton University Press.
Morris Raphael Cohen (1962). An Introduction to Logic. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World.
Lou Goble (ed.) (2001). The Blackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic. Blackwell Publishers.
Graeme Forbes (1994). Modern Logic: A Text in Elementary Symbolic Logic. Oxford University Press.
W. Newton-Smith (1985). Logic: An Introductory Course. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
D. S. Clarke (1973). Deductive Logic. Carbondale,Southern Illinois University Press.
Paul Tomassi (1999). Logic. Routledge.
Theodore Sider (2010). Logic for Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
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