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    These cultures represent a pre-logical stage of thinking. — Carmelics
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    Supports→Some cultures do not subscribe to universal laws of logic such as non-contradiction and identity, suggesting logic is culturally relative rather than universal.

    These cultures represent a pre-logical stage of thinking.

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    Some cultures do not subscribe to universal laws of logic such as non-contradict...Tribal or 'primitive' cultures were observed to operate without applying the pri...

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    A new thought style, once it becomes canonical, appears to reflect the...75%History has consisted of a sequence of cultures (Oriental, Egyptian, P...74%Both Hegel and Kant characterize thinking as an activity that operates...74%Studies of Asian philosophy routinely apply the category 'Asian' to an...74%

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    Debates about the scope and authority of logic are also focal to discussions of rationality. The argument for relativism about logic is usually traced to the French anthropologist Lucien Lévy-Bruhl (1857–1939) who claimed that tribal or “primitive” cultures did not subscribe to universal laws of logic such as the principles of non-contradiction and identity and were in a pre-logical stage of thinking (Lévy-Bruhl 1922/1923). In a posthumous publication, Lévy-Bruhl renounced his earlier views, fin

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