A book entitled (Aristotelian Logic in Contemporary Arab Thought: Ali Harb as a Model), authored by Assistant Lecturer Ghufraan Ali Muhammad Al-Samar, a faculty member at the College of Industrial Management for Oil and Gas, was published by Ghaida Publishing and Distribution House in Jordan.
The book is comprised of 240 pages and includes an introduction and three chapters:
* Chapter One is titled "Critique of Aristotelian Logic in Contemporary Arab Thought." In this chapter, the author discussed:
* The confinement of the value of Aristotelian syllogism.
* The varying structure of Aristotelian syllogism.
* The critique of Aristotelian induction in contemporary Arab thought.
* The failure of complete induction.
* A discussion of the Aristotelian principle of incomplete induction.
* Chapter Two focuses on "Ali Harb's Stance on Aristotelian Logic," discussing:
* The dominance and dilemmas of Aristotelian logic.
* Critique of the dominance of Aristotelian logic.
* Critique of identity, proof (Burhan), and the logic of disintegration (Tahafut).
* Critique of identity in Aristotelian logic. disintegration (Tahafut)
* Chapter Three is titled "Transformative Logic According to Ali Harb," examining important topics including:
* The transformative relational logic.
* The transformative relationship and essence (Ma'hiyya).
* Relationship, conformity (Tatabuq), and formation (Tashkil)
* Transformative reading.
* Deconstruction, transformation, and multitude (Kathra).
* The density of the concept of deconstruction.
* Deconstruction and its adversaries.
* Critique of proof (Burhan) in Aristotelian logic.
* Critique of the logic of