Hi Ben - 

thanks for your input - I just didn't look for a "logical" character under 
"Letterlike Symbols" - somehow! 
The glyph would fit well somehow for me - what was it's use in printing jobs in 
the 1930s - any? Who knows? 
Formal Logical is a rather late development of the 20th Century - for 
continental philosophy especially. 
So the question would be: was this logical character in use in Central European 
philosophical publications?

Eberhard alias Edward Conze turned to become "the" Prajñāpāramitā pandit later: 
        conze.elbrecht.com/

HE

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On Jan 11, 2013, at 6:48 PM, Ben Scarborough <[email protected]> wrote:

> 2013-01-10 23:28, Elbrecht wrote:
>> elbrecht.com/SW.png [400KB]
>> 
>> On title of a 1932/33 book on the "Principal of Contradiction" -
>> a mathematical/logical character in use for book printing???
> 
> I'm surprised that nobody pinned this as U+2129 TURNED GREEK SMALL LETTER 
> IOTA.
> 
> —Ben Scarborough

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名 非 〇
我 我 我
法 法 法
〇 是 即





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