riveting an Escher drawing in place




Dialectic
 (Greekδιαλεκτικήdialektikḗ; related to dialogueGermanDialektik), also known as the dialectical method, is a discourse between two or more people holding different points of view about a subject but wishing to establish the truth through reasoned argumentation


Dialectic resembles debate, but the concept excludes subjective elements such as emotional appeal and rhetoric (in the modern pejorative sense).[1][2] 



Dialectic may thus be


 contrasted with both the eristic, which refers to argument that aims to

 successfully dispute another's argument (rather than searching for truth), 

and the

 didactic method, wherein one side of the conversation teaches the other.

 Dialectic is alternatively known

 as minor logic,

 as opposed to 

major logic or

 critique.


Within Hegelianism, the word dialectic has the specialised meaning of a contradiction between ideas that serves as the determining factor in their relationship. Dialectical materialism, a theory or set of theories produced mainly by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, adapted the Hegelian dialectic into arguments regarding traditional materialism. The dialectics of Hegel and Marx were criticized in the twentieth century by the philosophers Karl Popper and Mario Bunge.

Dialectic tends to imply a process of evolution and so does not naturally fit within classical logics, but was given some formalism in the twentieth century. The emphasis on process is particularly marked in Hegelian dialectic, and even more so in Marxist dialectical logic, which tried to account for the evolution of ideas over longer time periods in the real world.

Comments