Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic, Volum 3Blackwood, 1860 - 510 sider |
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Side 14
... attributes ; in an act of Judgment , it com- pares , disjoins or conjoins concepts ; in Reasoning , it compares , disjoins or conjoins judgments . In each step of this process there is one essential element ; to think , to compare , to ...
... attributes ; in an act of Judgment , it com- pares , disjoins or conjoins concepts ; in Reasoning , it compares , disjoins or conjoins judgments . In each step of this process there is one essential element ; to think , to compare , to ...
Side 15
... attribute or attributes previously known as common to sundry objects , and to which we have accordingly given a general name . " In this process we are able , by abstraction , to distinguish from each other , -1 ° , The Matter and ...
... attribute or attributes previously known as common to sundry objects , and to which we have accordingly given a general name . " In this process we are able , by abstraction , to distinguish from each other , -1 ° , The Matter and ...
Side 21
... attribute . For such a comprehension enters into every act of the discursive faculty , in its different gradations of Con- ception , Judgment , and Reasoning . But by saying that Logic is conversant about thought proper , Logic is not ...
... attribute . For such a comprehension enters into every act of the discursive faculty , in its different gradations of Con- ception , Judgment , and Reasoning . But by saying that Logic is conversant about thought proper , Logic is not ...
Side 41
... attribute to the word conception , when you hear it from me , the meaning which it bears in the philoso- phical writings with which you are most likely to be familiar . What is the precise meaning of the term will be soon fully ...
... attribute to the word conception , when you hear it from me , the meaning which it bears in the philoso- phical writings with which you are most likely to be familiar . What is the precise meaning of the term will be soon fully ...
Side 77
... attributes , ( Karnуo- poúμeva , attributa ) ; as it is only in or through them that we say or enounce aught of a thing , they are called predicates , predicables , and predicaments , or categories , these words being here used in their ...
... attributes , ( Karnуo- poúμeva , attributa ) ; as it is only in or through them that we say or enounce aught of a thing , they are called predicates , predicables , and predicaments , or categories , these words being here used in their ...
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Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic: 3: Lectures on logic. 1 William Hamilton Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1860 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
absolutely abstract affirmative Anal animal antecedent applied Aristotle attributes Boethius called categorical syllogism character Compare concept conclusion condition considered constitute contained Contradiction contradictory conversant copula denote determined disjunctive disjunctive syllogism distinction division doctrine Edition enounced Enthymeme Esser example Excluded Middle exclusively existence Explication expressed extensive quantity figure form of thought free agent genus gism Greek hypothetical syllogism induction inference judgment knowledge Krug laws of Identity laws of thought LECT Lecture likewise Logic logicians Logik major premise Major term matter meaning ment Metaphysics middle term Minor term mood nature necessary negation negative notion object particular philosophers principle Prior propositio propositions proximate quadruped quantity of comprehension quantity of extension Reason and Consequent regard relation responsible agent rule signification sion sophism Sorites species sphere STOICHEIOLOGY subsumption sumption thing tion tive truth universal Whately whole words τὸ
Populære avsnitt
Side 423 - Nibelunge," such as it was written down at the end of the twelfth, or the beginning of the thirteenth century, is
Side 139 - You have all heard of the process of tunnelling, of tunnelling through a sand-bank. In this operation it is impossible to succeed unless every foot, nay, almost every inch, in our progress be secured by an arch of masonry, before we attempt the excavation of another. Now, language is to the mind, precisely what the arch is to the tunnel.
Side 138 - A country may be overrun by an armed host, but it is only conquered by the establishment of fortresses. Words are the fortresses of thought. They enable us to realize our dominion over what we have already overrun in thought — to make every intellectual conquest the basis of operations for others still beyond.
Side 112 - Any two sides of a triangle are together greater than the third side.