Nijaz Ibrulj

Nijaz Ibrulj
Born (1956-07-02) 2 July 1956
Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
Era Contemporary philosophy
Region Western philosophy
School Analytic philosophy
Main interests
Logic, Philosophy of mind, Philosophy of language, Cognitive science
Notable ideas
Principle of the Logical

Nijaz Ibrulj (born 2 July 1956) is a Bosnian philosopher and a professor at the University of Sarajevo's Department of Philosophy and Sociology. He lectures on logic, analytic philosophy, methodology of social sciences, theory of knowledge, and cognitive science.[1][2] His interests also extend to the field of social ontology. In 2000-2001 Ibrulj was awarded a Fulbright Visiting Scholarship to visit the University of California at Berkeley, where he worked with John Searle and Donald Davidson.[3]

Academic activities

Ibrulj is the founder and president of the Academia Analitica, a learned society for the development of logic and analytic philosophy in Bosnia and Herzegovina and director of the "ZINK", a scientific and research incubator.[4][5] He is the founding editor of SOPHOS, a young researchers’ journal and of The Logical Foresight, a journal for logic and science.

Work in philosophy

Ibrulj has written extensively on various topics of analytic philosophy, philosophical logic, and philosophy of language, cognitive science and social ontology.

In his book Philosophy of Logic (1999), he introduced a theory named the Principle of the Logical. He defines the Principle of the Logical as an ideal matrix of the logical principles or laws of thought (the law of identity, the law of non-contradiction, the law of excluded middle, the law of sufficient reason).[6]

In the book The Century of Rearrangement (2005), Ibrulj investigated the concepts of relation between identity and knowledge in an ambient of intelligent space, which is designed by modern informational and communicational technology, nanoscience and nanotechnology, and the processes of globalisation. He made a distinction between two theories of identity: a strong theory of identity (“anchored identity”) and a weak theory of identity (“mobile identity” or “identity in action”).[7][8]

Ibrulj has also translated from English (Donald Davidson), German (Gottlob Frege), and Ancient Greek (Bosnian–Greek edition of Porphyry's Isagoge).[9]

Bibliography

Books

Articles

Translations

References

  1. http://www.ff.unsa.ba/index.php?option=com_contact&catid=14&Itemid=52
  2. Ibrulj, Nijaz Bosnia Porphyriana. An Outline of the Development of Logic in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Pregled, 2, 2009.
  3. http://www.zrs-kp.si/EN/zaposleni/bibliografija_in_projekti.htm
  4. <http://www.academia-analitica.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&layout=blog&id=3&Itemid=9
  5. http://ziink.wordpress.com/clanovi-2/mentori/
  6. Ibrulj Philosophy of Logic (1999), ch. 4, pp. 187-226
  7. Ibrulj The Century of Rearrangements. Essays on Identity, Knowledge and Society. (2005), pp. 17-49
  8. Arnautović, Samir (2009). Transcendentalna filozofija i odrednice moderne. ISBN 978-9958-9419-2-4.
  9. Premec, Vladimir Kulturnoznanstvena vrednota in Dijalog, 1, 2009.


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