Reviews

Logic: A Very Short Introduction by Graham Priest

lawrencelankamp's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

5.0

tsuntsun's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

2.5

This is like really boring but everytime the narrator said 'logician' I understood 'magician' and that was funny as fuck lol 

edlin314's review against another edition

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informative

3.0

Yeah I think I missed out on a lot of the explanations and examples because of the audiobook format. I found the book hard to follow and to comprehend because of this.

alastairherd's review against another edition

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1.0

Before saying anything else if you are going to get a basic book on Logic don't get this one, get Logic by Wilfred Hodges (Pelican - Out of Print). You can find it easily online for less than this book and it is way better.

It took me a long time to get through this book. Not because it was long, but because it was too short.... Sadly, I always finish books I start so I made it out the other side.

I will start with the positives of the book which are:

1. It has problems and solutions in the back
2. It has a glossary page of terms at the back incase you forget what something means

Those are probably the best bits.

I've read quite a few "Very Short Introduction" books now and I've come to the conclusion that they're not very good. Most of them seem to be written by people who can't figure out what kind of book they're writing. They tend to be too short to give the reader any depth in the topic, but also too short for the author to actually explain the basics of the topic. Basically, a book for someone who doesn't need to read it.

With that said, this is definitely the worst one I have read.

Throughout the book the author seems to have a hard time staying on topic, which, given the brevity of the chapters makes most of them fairly pointless, reminding me more of one of those 10 minute explanatory Youtube videos where they spend 9 minutes rambling about the weather and then copy a load of text on screen at the end and think they're the bees-knees . If the chapters have to be short (or even "Very Short") then they ought to be focused on the topic at hand.

This book is only easy to read finishable if you already know enough logic to begin with to not need a "Very Short Introduction" and that point, why waste your time with this.

rita5ly's review

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informative medium-paced

3.75

stevywevo's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

3.5

loganjb's review against another edition

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3.0

Pretty good intro to logic, especially if you're studying philosophy or math. Brings up arguments that have been made for the existence of God, some don't seem to be analyzed as well as he thinks, but other wise it's worth a buy.

lavender_ani's review against another edition

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challenging

cantabilis's review

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was reading to see if i enjoyed logic for a future philosophy course, concluded that i did but didn’t sufficiently understand what was going on to make reading the rest of the book worthwhile

katzemoos's review against another edition

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3.0

I have a hard time rating this book, as I honestly had a hard time understanding it.

I do not know what my expectations for a book about logic were, but I was definitely surprised by the amount of math. Seemingly the math was simple, there was just a lot of it and as a typical language/history/social sciences-person I had a hard time following. To me the word examples given made perfect sense, but as soon as letters and symbols started symbolising words and parts of sentences Priest lost me.

What this book did wonderfully was apply humour to the otherwise dry topic and bring interesting examples and understandable examples (when math was NOT involved). Having small snarky comments definitely assisted the readability and took part in motivating me to make it till the end!

In conclusion I did not get much out of this book a part from possibly being able to recognise a few names and terms later in life and a little bit about the history of logic and I expected an easier approach from an introductory book, but I think that this is definitely an interesting read if you are interested in logic, but a bit of pre-knowledge is required.