Abstract
This is the first book-length study published of the structure of reasoning and argument dependent on hypotheses. It encompasses far more than the, by now, familiar discussion of contrafactual conditional—this is but one chapter—since it ranges over such topics as the nature of hypothetical inference, belief-contravening hypotheses, contrafactual conditionals and modality, and entailment of conclusion from premisses under restriction. There are three appendices which concern, respectively, the historical roots of hypothetical reasoning and its attendant perplexities, the difficulty concerned in the mutual compatibility of hypotheses in a proof, and certain properties of laws of nature expressed in conditional form. There is a fair-sized bibliography listing all the more important works on hypothetical reasoning. Rescher's logical apparatus designed to facilitate hypothetical reasoning and its study is controversial; but anyone wishing to understand the logic of the problems set forth in current philosophical discussion must begin with Rescher's book.—P. J. M.