grantor: University of TorontoAristotle recorded his intention to discuss hypothetical syllogistic fully ('An. pr.' 50a39), but no such treatment by him has been available since at least 200 AD, if ever it even existed. The contributions of his successor Theophrastus have also perished, as have those of Aristotle's followers of the subsequent few centuries. Furthermore, almost all of the surviving sources, especially the Greek commentators and Boethius, did not report hypothetical syllogistic accurately. Rather, they conflated it with Stoic logic, which it resembles in some respects, but from which it is significantly different. Modern scholars, who have not appreciated the nature or extent of this conflation, have unintentionally...