Institutes of LogicW. Blackwood and sons, 1885 - 551 páginas |
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... LANGUAGE , PRONOUNC- ING , ETYMOLOGICAL , AND EXPLANATORY , Embracing Scientific and other Terms , Numerous Familiar Terms , and a Copious Selection of Old English Words . By the REV . JAMES STORMONTH . The PRONUN- CIATION carefully ...
... LANGUAGE , PRONOUNC- ING , ETYMOLOGICAL , AND EXPLANATORY , Embracing Scientific and other Terms , Numerous Familiar Terms , and a Copious Selection of Old English Words . By the REV . JAMES STORMONTH . The PRONUN- CIATION carefully ...
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... LANGUAGE - INTUITIVE AND SYMBOLICAL THINKING , XII . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT : IDENTITY - NON - CONTRADICTION -EXCLUDED MIDDLE - DETERMINING REASON ,. XIII . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT - HAMILTON AND MILL , XIV . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT - THE DOCTRINE ...
... LANGUAGE - INTUITIVE AND SYMBOLICAL THINKING , XII . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT : IDENTITY - NON - CONTRADICTION -EXCLUDED MIDDLE - DETERMINING REASON ,. XIII . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT - HAMILTON AND MILL , XIV . THE LAWS OF THOUGHT - THE DOCTRINE ...
Página 19
... language by Honaïn and his son Isaac , who also professed the doctrines of the Nestorians , and lived at Bagdad in the beginning of the tenth century . After them came the Arabian translators and commentators , ―a school of Dialectic ...
... language by Honaïn and his son Isaac , who also professed the doctrines of the Nestorians , and lived at Bagdad in the beginning of the tenth century . After them came the Arabian translators and commentators , ―a school of Dialectic ...
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... languages , united the nations of Europe in common intellectual conceptions , formed , in fact , modern intelligence on its side of clearness , distinct- ness , and connectedness . For true it is that the moulds even of that science and ...
... languages , united the nations of Europe in common intellectual conceptions , formed , in fact , modern intelligence on its side of clearness , distinct- ness , and connectedness . For true it is that the moulds even of that science and ...
Página 31
... language is defined as the harmony of thought with the thing itself , or of the subjective with the objective . ( Cf. Trendelenburg in loco . ) A true sentence is by no means the cause of a thing's existence , but in some way the thing ...
... language is defined as the harmony of thought with the thing itself , or of the subjective with the objective . ( Cf. Trendelenburg in loco . ) A true sentence is by no means the cause of a thing's existence , but in some way the thing ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
absolutely abstract actual affirmative animal antecedent applied Aristotle assertion attribute biped Boethius called cause common Comprehension conceived concept conclusion consciousness consequent contains contradiction contradictory contrary conversion copula Crown 8vo definite deny Descartes disjunctive distinction doctrine Edition Enthymeme essential exclusion existence experience expression Extension fact fallacy false Fcap Figure formal formal fallacies generalisation genus gism given ground Hamilton Hegel hypothetical Illustrations individual object Induction intuition judgment knowledge law of Identity law of Non-Contradiction laws of thought logicians major premiss mark matter means middle term Mill moods nature necessarily necessary negation negative Non-Contradiction notion Occam opposition organised particular phænomenon plant positive possible Prantl predicate principle properly proposition quantity reality reasoning reference regarded relation rule sense simply singular Socrates speak species sphere subject and predicate sublate supposed Syllogism thing thought tion triangle true truth Ueberweg universal valid vols whole wholly words
Passagens conhecidas
Página 474 - If an instance in which the phenomenon under investigation occurs, and an instance in which it does not occur, have every circumstance in common save one, that one occurring only in the former; the circumstance in which alone the two instances differ is the effect, or the cause, or an indispensable part of the cause, of the phenomenon.
Página 215 - O'er Roslin all that dreary night A wondrous blaze was seen to gleam ; Twas broader than the watch-fire's light, And redder than the bright moonbeam. It glared on Roslin's castled rock, It ruddied all the copse-wood glen ; 'Twas seen from Dryden's groves of oak, And seen from cavern'd Hawthornden.