Concerning the laws of contradiction and excluded middle

Philosophy of Science 6 (2):196-211 (1939)
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Abstract

Tradition usually assigns greater importance to the so-called laws of thought than to other logical principles. Since these laws could apparently not be deduced from the other principles without circularity and all deductions appeared to make use of them, their priority was considered well established. Generally, it was held that the laws of thought have no proof and need none, that as universal constitutive or transcendental principles they are self-evident.

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reprint Mcgill, V. J. (1939) "Concerning the Laws of Contradiction and Excluded Middle". Journal of Symbolic Logic 4(2):101-101

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