Picture Logic: Or, The Grave Made Gay; an Attempt to Popularise the Science of Reasoning by the Combination of Humorous Pictures with Examples of Reasoning Taken from Daily LifeLongmans, Green, 1875 - 166 páginas |
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Página 15
... tion we enunciate the law , " all water has drowning properties . " Now this is a condition upon which water's being water depends , for if a man pointed to some water and said , " This water has no drowning properties , " we should say ...
... tion we enunciate the law , " all water has drowning properties . " Now this is a condition upon which water's being water depends , for if a man pointed to some water and said , " This water has no drowning properties , " we should say ...
Página 40
... tion of those laws . It is thus that Logic is more of a science than an art . ' It so happened that we had our Logic lecture after supper this time , to enable us to make a sailing expedition in the daytime ; and , partly from fatigue ...
... tion of those laws . It is thus that Logic is more of a science than an art . ' It so happened that we had our Logic lecture after supper this time , to enable us to make a sailing expedition in the daytime ; and , partly from fatigue ...
Página 45
... tion . " Thought meekly raises his head to read the laws once more , and catches sight of some stars in the sky . Gazing in wonder he meditates aloud , " Yonder's a lovely star ; most assuredly that star must be a planet , for I know ...
... tion . " Thought meekly raises his head to read the laws once more , and catches sight of some stars in the sky . Gazing in wonder he meditates aloud , " Yonder's a lovely star ; most assuredly that star must be a planet , for I know ...
Página 46
... tion by lecturing Mr. Cawdle for what he had not done , on the assumption that a man could both do a thing and not do it at the same place and time , e.g. , when she upbraids him at length for flirting at Greenwich fair , and upon his ...
... tion by lecturing Mr. Cawdle for what he had not done , on the assumption that a man could both do a thing and not do it at the same place and time , e.g. , when she upbraids him at length for flirting at Greenwich fair , and upon his ...
Página 63
... tion ; the abstract and attributive only connotation ; and the common terms , both . For the singular term is a mere mark arbitrarily imposed upon an indivi- dual , not in virtue of the possession of certain attri- butes , but simply ...
... tion ; the abstract and attributive only connotation ; and the common terms , both . For the singular term is a mere mark arbitrarily imposed upon an indivi- dual , not in virtue of the possession of certain attri- butes , but simply ...
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Picture Logic: An Attempt to Popularise the Science of Reasoning by the ... Alfred James Swinburne Sin vista previa disponible - 2017 |
Términos y frases comunes
accidens accident apple dumpling applied ASEBINOP asked Dyver attri attributes birds Black Watch butes called canon Celarent CHAPTER comet common terms comparison conclusion connotation CONNOTATION AND DENOTATION conversion copula correct thoughts costermonger Cretans are liars definition denotation Denying the antecedent difference differentia DISTRIBUTION OF TERMS divided division express fallacies four figures genus give horse Hypothetical Syllogisms illicit minor illicit process individuals instance jests at scars kind laws Logic is deep Logical form logician look major premiss MAJOR TERM matter of thought mean middle term mind mood obey observed particular facts point of view predicate probably prove qualities question rational animal remarks and inferences remember replied rules science and art simple Socrates Socrates is mortal speak species sponge is damp stars stone term or concept tion tree Triangles true truth tutor universal knowledge universal propositions valid Violates weather is rainy words دو وو
Pasajes populares
Página 9 - Then he wrote something on a slip of paper, and handed it to me. It was — 'All bodies tend to fall to the earth (uniformity or law of gravity).' ' There,' said he, 'that's the process; of course simple uniformities like these were observed long ago. I'm engaged in much more abstruse and complicated work now, but the process is precisely the same.
Página 138 - If this man were wise, he would not speak irreverently of Scripture in jest; and if he were good, he would not do so in earnest; but he does it, either in jest or earnest ; therefore he is either not wise or not good.
Página 159 - A thing cannot both be and not be. 3. The Law of Duality. A thing must either be or not be. ' ' The first of these statements may perhaps be regarded as a description of identity itself, if so fundamental a notion can admit of description. A thing at any moment is perfectly identical with itself, and, if any person were unaware of...
Página 113 - Again, the mathematical postulate that things which are equal to the same are equal to one another, is similar to the form of the syllogism in logic, which unites things agreeing in the middle term.
Página 115 - There can only be four figures. Where the middle term is subject in the major and predicate in the minor premiss, where it is predicate in both, where it is subject in both, and where it is predicate and subject ; eg, take the mood AAA in all the four figures : — A. All B is A A.
Página 132 - All A is B All B is C All C is D All D is E /. All A is E 20.
Página 111 - All men are mortal, Socrates is a man, .'. Socrates is mortal.
Página 24 - Thought, usually stated as follows : — 1. The Law of Identity. Whatever is, is. 2. The Law of Contradiction. A thing cannot both be and not be. 3. The Law of Duality. A thing must either be or not be.
Página 154 - Jinal cause. Hence there are four things without which a statue ceases to be a statue, and these are the four causes. CONCEPTION (See Faculties). CONCEPTUALIST (See Nominalist). CONTRADICTORY (See Terms). DIALECTIC. The art of discoursing. Also the old name of Logic. Several other meanings. DICTUM DE OMNI ET NULLO. This means to say that what is true of a class is true of each individual in the class. Now to those who hold that classes are merely the sum of individuals composing them, this assertion...
Página 128 - A," but we must not convert an A proposition simply, we must employ conversion per accidens, and it becomes