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Chapter 7 - Collingwood’s Logic of Question and Answer

Connecting the Dots

from Part II - Issues in Collingwood’s Philosophy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2024

David Collins
Affiliation:
Churchill College, Cambridge
Christopher Williams
Affiliation:
University of Nevada, Reno
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Summary

This chapter argues that Collingwood’s “logic of question and answer” (LQA) can best be understood in the light of contemporary argumentation theory. Even if Collingwood quite often describes LQA in terms of inner thinking and reasoning, as was still usual in his time, his insistence on the normative (“criteriological”) character of LQA, paired with his attack on the pretensions of psychologists to describe logic (as well as other normative endeavours) in a purely empirical manner, makes clear that LQA has the same aspirations as the rising discipline of formal (mathematical) logic. The concise exposition of the form, content, and application of LQA is supported by references to all the relevant passages in Collingwood’s oeuvre as well as illustrated by means of a concrete example of his way of doing history. Although a recent and still developing discipline, contemporary argumentation theory was born as an attempt to describe and analyze argumentative texts as guided by norms constitutive of our argumentative practices in a way that completely escapes formal logic. It thus provides a place for LQA that has so far been lacking.

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Interpreting R. G. Collingwood
Critical Essays
, pp. 123 - 142
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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