The Logic of Invariable Concomitance in the Tattvacintāmaṇi :
[Book]
Gaṅgeśa's Anumitinirūpaṇa and Vyāptivāda with Introduction Translation and Commentary
by C. Goekoop.
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
1967
I. Principal Elements of Navya-ny?ya Logic --;II. Ga?ge?a's Theory of Pervasion --;Anumitinir?pa?a and Vy?ptiv?da by Ga?ge?op?dhy?ya Transliteration, Translation and Commentary Anumitinir?pa?a and Vy?ptiv?da --;Section I. General observations about inference --;Section II. Theory of pervasion --;I. Five definitions of pervasion as non-deviation --;II. Two definitions of pervasion called Lion-Tiger Definition --;III. Absence limited by a property whose loci are different from its counterpositive --;IV. Preliminary refutation of a series of definitions of pervasion --;V. The conclusive definition of pervasion --;VI. Universal absence --;VII. Pervasion between particulars --;Sanskrit Index --;English Index.
The history of Indian logic is roughly divided into three periods: old Nyaya, Buddhist logic and new Nyaya. Under Western logic I bring both traditional logic and modern logic, which, in my opinion, form one discipline of reasoning.