| Samuel Hinds (bp. of Norwich.) - Logic - 1827 - 190 pages
...application of which every valid argument is, in reality, an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (ie affirmed or denied) universally, of any class of things,...predicated, in like manner, (viz. affirmed or denied) of anything comprehended in that class." This is the principle, commonly called the dictum de omni et... | |
| Samuel Hinds (bp. of Norwich.) - Logic - 1827 - 196 pages
...application of which every valid argument is, in reality, an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (ie affirmed or denied) universally, of any class of things,...predicated, in like manner, (viz. affirmed or denied) of anything comprehended in that class." This is the principle, commonly called the dictum de omni et... | |
| S. E. Parker - Logic - 1837 - 344 pages
...of the syllogism, we are indebted to ARISTOTLE : it may be thus expressed. " Whatever is predicated, affirmed or denied, universally, of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner, affirmed or denied, of any thing comprehended in that class." As a frequent reference to this principle... | |
| Edward Tagart - Logic - 1837 - 156 pages
...of the true syllogism, he says there is this maxim resulting from it, " that whatever is predicated universally of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner of any thing comprehended in that class," — the celebrated principle called the dictum de omni et... | |
| S. E. PARKER - Logic - 1838 - 340 pages
...of the syllogism, we are indebted to ARISTOTLE : it may be thus expressed. " Whatever is predicated, affirmed or denied, universally, of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner, affirmed or denied, of any thing comprehended in that class." As a frequent reference to this principle... | |
| Charles Morley - Literature - 1841 - 120 pages
...Conclusion; The sensualist is not a freeman. Extremes. Aristotle's rule. — Whatever is predicated, affirmed, or denied universally, of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner, affirmed or denied, of any thing comprehended in that class. SUMMARY OF FALLACIES IN ARGUMENT. GENUS... | |
| Richard Whately - Logic - 1849 - 170 pages
...application of which every valid argument is in reality an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (ie affirmed or denied) universally, of any class of things,...This is the principle, commonly called the dictum deomni & nullo, for the establishment of which we are indebted to Aristotle, and which is the keystone... | |
| Samuel Bailey - Logic - 1851 - 254 pages
...the celebrated dictum of Aristotle. The dictum de omni et nullo, viz. that " whatever is predicated universally of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner of any thing comprehended in that class," is not only stated by logicians to be a general maxim, of... | |
| Richard Whately - Logic - 1852 - 500 pages
...of which, every valid argument is in reality an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (i". e. affirmed or denied) universally, of any Class of things,...This is the principle, commonly called the dictum dc omni et nullo, for the indication of which we are indebted to Aristotle, and which is the ieystone... | |
| sir George Ramsay (9th bart.) - 1853 - 282 pages
...the fundamental principle of all syllogisms, the famous dictum of Aristotle, which is, that whatever is affirmed or denied universally of any class of things, may be affirmed or denied of anything comprehended in that class. This, according to Archbishop Whately, is... | |
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