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Gajo Petrovic Logika.pdf Apr 2026

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This leads to an affirmative strand in his thought. If logic is shaped by history, then it can be reshaped; conceptual habits can be reformed toward greater lucidity and justice. Petrović champions critical education: learning to reason not as an end in itself but as a skill for emancipation. The classroom becomes a training ground for citizens who can read the map of social forces and redraw it.

To read Logika is to travel with Petrović through the architecture of thought and the geography of society. You emerge with sharpened instruments: clearer concepts, keener suspicion of totalizing narratives, and a renewed sense that reason must be tethered to responsibility. The book does not promise simple solutions; it offers a durable habit of mind, one that insists logic is never merely theoretical but always, quietly, worldmaking.

Gajo Petrović enters the lecture hall like a thinker who has been away from home and returns holding a ring of keys: each a concept, each unlocking a room of thought. The book he carries—Logika—sits heavy not only with pages but with the accumulated tension of mid‑20th‑century philosophy: Marxism wrestling with phenomenology, system with human possibility, clarity with critique. He does not simply carry arguments; he carries a way of seeing how reason moves through history.

His method is dialectical—not as a mechanical alternation of thesis and antithesis, but as a patient tracing of tension across concepts. Simple oppositions dissolve under his scrutiny. Instead of treating contradiction as failure, he reads it as motion: a productive friction revealing where assumptions harden into dogma. Thus he insists that concepts must be tested against both formal standards and social reality. A valid argument that sustains injustice is still subject to critique; a sound social program that rests on muddled concepts risks implosion.

In the later passages, the tone turns reflective. He asks how thinkers can remain faithful to reason while refusing complicity with oppressive structures. The answer is not a rulebook but a stance: a disciplined openness that couples analytic rigor with ethical vigilance. Logic, rightly practiced, is both scalpel and compass—able to dissect error and point toward better horizons.

Petrović’s prose carries the modest courage of a teacher who expects readers to come away altered. He attends carefully to definitions—what counts as meaning, how predicates gather subjects—but refuses the purist’s temptation to enshrine definitions behind locked glass. Meanings are negotiated in practice: insofar as we act with concepts, those concepts embody tendencies and limits of action. Logic, then, is implicated in ethics and politics.