, whose
Prior Analytics contained an early discussion of this fallacy The original phrase used by
Aristotle from which
begging the question descends is , or sometimes , . Aristotle's intended meaning is closely tied to the type of
dialectical argument he discusses in his
Topics, book VIII: a formalized debate in which the defending party asserts a thesis that the attacking party must attempt to refute by asking yes-or-no questions and deducing some inconsistency between the responses and the original thesis. In this stylized form of debate, the proposition that the answerer undertakes to defend is called () and one of the rules of the debate is that the questioner cannot simply ask (beg) for it (that would be trivial and uninteresting). Aristotle discusses this in
Sophistical Refutations and in
Prior Analytics book II, (64b, 34–65a 9, for circular reasoning see 57b, 18–59b, 1). The stylized dialectical exchanges Aristotle discusses in the
Topics included rules for scoring the debate, and one important issue was precisely the matter of
asking for the initial thing—which included not just making the actual thesis adopted by the answerer into a question, but also making a question out of a sentence that was too close to that thesis (for example,
PA II 16). The term was translated into English from
Latin in the 16th century. The Latin version, , can be interpreted in different ways. (from ), in the
post-classical context in which the phrase arose, means or , but in the older classical sense means , or . ,
genitive of , means , or (of an argument). Literally means or . The Latin phrase comes from the Greek ( ) in Aristotle's
Prior Analytics II xvi 64b28–65a26: Aristotle's distinction between
apodictic science and other forms of nondemonstrative knowledge rests on an
epistemology and
metaphysics wherein appropriate
first principles become apparent to the trained dialectician:
Thomas Fowler believed that would be more properly called , which is literally . == Definition ==