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For a long time, it was believed in Assyriology and related disciplines
that šumma sentences, or grammatical conditionals, which appeared in
cuneiform texts and tablets of astrology, exorcism, law, extispicy,
oneiromancy, medicine, and divination, were linguistic expressions of
logical conditionals. F. Rochberg (2010; 2016) extended this belief,
suggesting that they are even material conditionals. Andrew Schumann
(2017; 2020; 2021) followed this, claiming that, as a result, we can
trace the origin of symbolic logic in cuneiform writings, through which
it moved to Greece. In this paper, after presenting this approach, I will
challenge it by showing that šumma/IF sentences and similar
constructs in cuneiform literature are arguments or implications that
suffer from the same confusion between conditional and implication
that Quine (1953/1966) highlighted when criticizing C.I. Lewis.
Keywords: logic, conditional, implication, cuneiform texts, argument,
Babylonian science, šumma