Logic, Tom 1

Przednia okładka
Longmans, Green, Reader, & Dyer, 1870
 

Wybrane strony

Spis treści

I
1
II
42
III
61
IV
78
V
133
VI
178
VII
207
VIII
214
IX
219

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Strona 178 - If our intellectual part is common, the reason also, in respect of which we are rational beings, is common: if this is so, common also is the reason which commands us what to do, and what not to do; if this is so, there is a common law also; if this is so, we are fellowcitizens; if this is so, we are members of some political community; if this is so, the world is in a manner a state.
Strona 178 - The general object which all laws have, or ought to have, in common, is to augment the total happiness of the community; and therefore, in the first place, to exclude, as far as may be, everything that tends to subtract from that happiness: in other words, to exclude mischief.
Strona 263 - The Bodies, or external objects which excite certain of those feelings, together with the powers or properties whereby they excite them ; these latter (at least) being included rather in compliance with common opinion, and because their existence is taken for granted in the common language from which I cannot prudently deviate, than because the recognition of such powers or properties as real existences appears to be warranted by a sound philosophy.
Strona 217 - The square described on the hypothenuse of a rightangled triangle is equal to the sum of the squares described on the other two sides.
Strona 273 - ... of venturing upon the untrodden land of future possibility. The fact, generally expressed as nature's uniformity, is the guarantee, the ultimate major premise, of all induction. " What has been, will be," justifies the inference that water will assuage thirst in after times.
Strona 274 - that what has uniformly been in the past, will be in the future/' is one of them. And it is essential to the physicist. He cannot take a step without it. Dr. Bain well calls it " the one ultimate premiss of all induction." But Mr. Spencer does not recognize the faculty of intuition. In truth it is incompatible with his doctrine of The Unknowable. The primordial...
Strona 188 - The language of ratiocination would, I think, be brought into closer agreement with the real nature of the process, if the general propositions employed in reasoning, instead of being in the form All men are mortal, or Every man is mortal, were expressed in the form Any man is mortal. This mode of expression, exhibiting as the type of all reasoning from experience ' ' The men A, B, C, &c. are so and so, therefore any man is so and so...
Strona 54 - The essential Relativity of all knowledge, thought or consciousness cannot but show itself in language. If everything that we can know is viewed as a transition from something -eise, every experience must have two sides; and either every name must have a double meaning, or else for every meaning there must be two names.
Strona 178 - But all punishment is mischief: all punishment in itself is evil. Upon the principle of utility, if it ought at all to be admitted, it ought only to be admitted in as far as it promises to exclude some greater evil.

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