| John Andrews - Logic - 1801 - 144 pages
...conclufion will be affirmative. The following is an example. If God did not create the world perfefl in its kind; it must have proceeded, either from want...of inclination, 'or want of power : Therefore it is abfurd to fay, that God did not create the world perfect in its kind. A dilemma may be faulty three... | |
| William Duncan - Logic - 1802 - 244 pages
...disjunctive proposition, which is wholly taken away or removed in the minor. Of this kind is the following : If God did not create the world perfect in its kind," it must either proceed from want of inclination, or from want of power. But it could not proceed either from... | |
| William Duncan - Logic - 1802 - 258 pages
...disjunctive proposition, which is wholly taken away or removed in the minor. Of this kind is the following : If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must either proceed from want of inclination, or from want of power. "t it could not proceed either from... | |
| William Duncan - Logic - 1802 - 256 pages
...disjunctive proposition, -which is wholly taken away or removed in the minor. Of this kind is the following : If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it jnust either proceed from want of inclination, or from want of power. But' it could not proceed either... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1816 - 746 pages
...propofition, which is wholly taken away or removed in the m.aor. Of this kind is the following : — If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it rmift either proceed from want of inclination, or from want of power: — But it could not proceed... | |
| Alexander Jamieson - Industrial arts - 1829 - 654 pages
...it is an argument by which we endeavour to prove the absurdity or falsehood of some assertion. Exam. If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must have been from want of inclination or power. But it could not have been from want of inclination, or want... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 412 pages
...proposition, which is wholly taken away or removed in the minor. Of this kind is the following : — ' If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must either proceed from want of inclination, or from want of power : — But it could not proceed either... | |
| Noah Webster - English language - 1839 - 262 pages
...place. These suppositions are to be removed by the minor, and this removes that of the antecedent. Thus, If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must have been from the want of inclination, or the want of power. But it could not have been either from want... | |
| Charles Kittredge True - Logic - 1840 - 152 pages
...has no extension has no parts. What has no parts is indissoluble. Therefore, the mind is immortal. 3. If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must either proceed from want of inclination or from want of power. But it could not proceed from want of... | |
| Richard Hiley - English language - 1846 - 330 pages
...true, proves that one of them is false, and concludes that the other, therefore, must be true. Thus, " If God did not create the world perfect in its kind, it must have been from want either of inclination or of power. But it could not have been from want either of inclination... | |
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