The Application of LogicMacmillan and Company, limited, 1910 - 321 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 43
Page 3
... parties , but also the internal debates which a man may hold with himself in cases of doubt or per- plexity . So far as our internal debates can be examined at all , they appear to differ from the ordinary controversial ones chiefly in ...
... parties , but also the internal debates which a man may hold with himself in cases of doubt or per- plexity . So far as our internal debates can be examined at all , they appear to differ from the ordinary controversial ones chiefly in ...
Page 10
... parties . Our general view of argument , then , is of something that is always with us , though it does not constitute the whole of life . Arguments daily arise about matters small and great , and the smaller arguments are of interest ...
... parties . Our general view of argument , then , is of something that is always with us , though it does not constitute the whole of life . Arguments daily arise about matters small and great , and the smaller arguments are of interest ...
Page 11
... parties may be led to take into account things that they would otherwise have failed to notice , and though the old phrases and the hostile banners may be carefully preserved they pick up new or modified meanings . The shallow truth ...
... parties may be led to take into account things that they would otherwise have failed to notice , and though the old phrases and the hostile banners may be carefully preserved they pick up new or modified meanings . The shallow truth ...
Page 16
... parties , and also that what is disputed is not the truth of the facts alleged as evidence , but their relevance or evidentiary value . There are plain issues , like the question whether the claimant is or is not the person he ...
... parties , and also that what is disputed is not the truth of the facts alleged as evidence , but their relevance or evidentiary value . There are plain issues , like the question whether the claimant is or is not the person he ...
Page 26
... parties would agree that the inference is a complex one , but even then they disagree about the extent and kind of its complexity ; and often we find one party claiming that the matter is " perfectly simple , " while the other party ...
... parties would agree that the inference is a complex one , but even then they disagree about the extent and kind of its complexity ; and often we find one party claiming that the matter is " perfectly simple , " while the other party ...
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Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actual admit ambiguous middle analogy answer application argument arise assertion assertor assume assumption axiom begging begging the question called causal cause claim class-name clear clumsy common sense complex conclusion confusion context defect defence definition deny depends descriptive difference difficulty discovered dispute distinction doubt effect enquiry error of fact example exist experiment explain expression fallacy false false analogy formal logic given happens imagine important inductive logic inference instance interpretation irrelevant kind knowledge Law of Identity less logical doctrine major premiss ment merely method Method of Difference middle term Mill's Method misleading nature never noticed notion objector observation occasion old logic opponent opponent's particular parties possible precisely predicate purpose questions of fact quibbler reason recognise referred regard rule simple statement supposed syllogism syllogistic thing tion true truth undeniable unimportant vagueness verbal Wage-Fund whole word
Popular passages
Page 5 - ... to which they ought to conform ; and they naturally conclude that we have only got to reason more and to reason better, in order speedily to perfect the whole machinery by which human felicity is to be secured. Surely this is a great delusion. A community founded upon argument would soon be a community no longer. It would dissolve into its constituent elements. Think of the thousand ties most subtly woven out of common sentiments, common tastes, common beliefs, nay, common prejudices, by which...
Page 97 - Our minds grow in spots ; and like grease spots the spots spread. But we let them spread as little as possible ; we keep unaltered as much of our old knowledge, as many of our old prejudices and beliefs as we can. We patch and tinker more than we renew. The novelty soaks in ; it stains the ancient mass ; but it is also tinged by what absorbs it.
Page 174 - Certainly a man has a right to do what he likes with his own, but then every man who does so must make up his mind to certain little penalties.
Page 175 - be meant that a man may do what he likes with his own property...
Page v - This book," says the writer in the preface, " attempts to state with a minimum of technicality the logical doctrines that remain when we discard those parts of the traditional logic which are misleading in application.