An Examination of the Deductive Logic of John Stuart Mill |
Contents
EPISTEMOLOGICAL STANDPOINT | 1 |
SCOPE OF LOGIC | 15 |
CONNOTATIVE AND NONCONNOTATIVE NAMES | 26 |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
admit affirmation aggregate of particular already alternative proposition answer Archbishop Whately argument ascertain assertion attributes connoted axioms believe Chapter clusion concede concession conclusion conjunction deductive sciences definition denoted dictum de omni direct mode disloyal account distinction distinguish doctrine Duke of Wellington epistemological empiricism epistemological empiricist essential proposition evidence of q experience expression fact false Formal Logic formula gism implies q inconceivable indispensable individual induction inference to particulars intuition knowledge known Logical Value major premiss meaning men are mortal merely apparent inference merely verbal propositions Mill says Mill's claim minor objection observed operation orthodox logician petitio principii Philosophy position predicate principle proper names propositional sentence prove question ratiocination rational real and merely real inference reasoning requires S₁ Socrates is mortal sufficient evidence syllogistic major syllogistic theory tautological sentence thing tion true ultimate premisses universal proposition valid validly inferable vocally and graphically Whately word