The North American Review, Volume 87Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1858 - American fiction Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Page 4
... true of all members of a class , is true of each member of it . Thus the most direct form of the syllogism would be : - A certain thing is true of a certain class of objects ; this object belongs to that class ; and therefore that thing ...
... true of all members of a class , is true of each member of it . Thus the most direct form of the syllogism would be : - A certain thing is true of a certain class of objects ; this object belongs to that class ; and therefore that thing ...
Page 13
... true of a myriad of cases surveyed instantaneously by a mental glance , is confidently assumed to be true of all possible cases . But in inductive reasoning , the mind proceeds more slowly in the investigation of examples , and infers ...
... true of a myriad of cases surveyed instantaneously by a mental glance , is confidently assumed to be true of all possible cases . But in inductive reasoning , the mind proceeds more slowly in the investigation of examples , and infers ...
Page 259
... true portrait of what they are could be drawn from what they have written . The very contradictions , doublings , and contrasts in the opinions of an author , are often largely explained by knowing the structure of his mind . He does ...
... true portrait of what they are could be drawn from what they have written . The very contradictions , doublings , and contrasts in the opinions of an author , are often largely explained by knowing the structure of his mind . He does ...
Contents
GEORGE STEPHENSON | 21 |
THE MISSOURI VALLEY AND THE GREAT PLAINS | 66 |
Les Parlements de France Essai Historique | 94 |
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