Diairesis

Diairesis (Ancient Greek: διαίρεσις, romanizeddiaíresis, "division") is a form of classification used in ancient (especially Platonic) logic that serves to systematize concepts and come to definitions. When defining a concept using diairesis, one starts with a broad concept, then divides this into two or more specific sub-concepts, and this procedure is repeated until a definition of the desired concept is reached. Aristotle makes extensive use of diaresis in categorization as basis for syllogizing. He makes clear, however, that definition by diaresis does not in itself prove anything.[1] Apart from this definition, the procedure also results in a taxonomy of other concepts, ordered according to a general–specific relation.

The founder of diairesis as a method was Plato. Later ancient logicians (including Aristotle) and practitioners of other ancient sciences have employed diairetic modes of classification, e.g., to classify plants in ancient biology.

  1. ^ Shorey, Paul (January 1924). "The Origin of the Syllogism". Classical Philology. 19 (1): 1–19. doi:10.1086/360550. ISSN 0009-837X. S2CID 162227302.