The Laws of Discursive Thought: Being a Text-book of Formal Logic

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R. Carter & Brothers, 1873 - 212 páginas
 

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First Rule We must proceed according to Marks
40
LOGICAL DEFINITION
46
Criticism of Lockes views
52
RELATIVE AND CORRELATIVE NOTIONS
55
SECTION PAGE FALLACIES
76
Especially in Abstruse Thinking
81
Nature of the Copula
95
SECTION PAGE 9 Fourfold Division of Propositions A E I O
96
Distribution of Subject and Predicate
97
EQUIVALENT PROPOSITIONS
98
PROPOSITIONS IN WHICH THE RELATION IS OF EXTENSION AND COMPREHENSION
99
Inconvertible and ConvertibleSubstitutive and Attributive
100
1920 Cases in which Predicate is a General Notion Distributed U
101
Predicables of Aristotle and Porphyry
102
Should the Predicate always be Quantified?
103
Hamiltons Table of Judgments
104
CONJUNCTIONS OF PROPOSITIONS CONDITIONALS AND DISJUNC TIVES 24 Various Conjunctions
105
Conditionals their Nature
106
Conditionals may be Equivalent or Attributive
107
IMPLIED JUDGMENTS OR IMMEDIATE INFERENCES 32 Their Nature
108
Opposition in Equivalent Propositions
109
Subalternation
110
Contrary Opposition
111
Demonstration
112
Transposed Propositions obtained by Opposition
113
Transposed Judgments obtained by Extension
114
Implied Judgments are obtained by Comprehension
115
Conditional Propositions
117
How Logic aids in Determining the Truth of a Proposition
118
SECTION PAGE
120
FIRST REGULATING PRINCIPLE Notions Equivalent to one
126
SECTION PAGE 45 The Two Dicta Combined
141
Mills Theory of Reasoning Process
143
48Reasoning from Plurative Judgments
144
CONDITIONAL REASONING 49 Its Nature and Rules
145
Common Forms
146

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Página 59 - Language is a perpetual orphic song, Which rules with Daedal harmony a throng Of thoughts and forms, which else senseless and shapeless were.
Página 176 - Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.
Página 176 - Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: Which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ.
Página 67 - Theirs is the language of the heavens, the power. The thought, the image, and the silent joy : Words are but under-agents in their souls ; When they are grasping with their greatest strength. They do not breathe among them...
Página 204 - And when the barbarians saw the venomous beast hang on his hand, they said among themselves, No doubt this man is a murderer, whom, though he hath escaped the sea, yet vengeance suffereth not to live.
Página ix - In this treatise the Notion (with the Term and the Relation of Thought to language, ) will be found to occupy a larger relative place than in any logical work written since the time of the famous
Página 157 - One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, the Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies.
Página 204 - I knew that I had crossed the track of a camel that had strayed from its owner, because I saw no mark of any human footstep on the same route. I knew that the animal was blind in one eye, because it had cropped...
Página 77 - Two persons may contradict each other, and yet both speak truth. For the truth of one person may be opposite to the truth of another.
Página 213 - ... of its present condition, and by its entering in a deeper and more unfettered manner than its predecessors upon the discussion of the appropriate psychological, ethical, and theological questions. The author keeps aloof at once from the a priori idealism and dreaminess of German speculation since Schelling, and from the onesidedness and narrowness of the empiricism and positivism which have so prevailed in England.

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