| 1833 - 598 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule — What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
| English literature - 1833 - 598 pages
...(or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule — What helongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent parts,...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
| Thomas Martin - 1835 - 392 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule — What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
| 1839 - 394 pages
...(to borrow again from a high metaphysical authority already cited) is governed by the rule, " That what belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole." The imperfect or rhetorical induction assumes, that what belongs (or does not belong) to some of the... | |
| H. H. Munro - Logic - 1850 - 272 pages
...belong to each and all of the contained parts. Inductive reasoning, again, is governed by the rule ; what belongs, or does not belong, to all the constituent...belongs, or does not belong to the constituted whole. These two rules are equally absolute, and determine all formal or logical inference. Whatever transcends... | |
| Sir William Hamilton - Education - 1852 - 848 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule:— What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
| Sir William Hamilton - Education - 1853 - 828 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule : — What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...(belongs or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
| Theology - 1856 - 984 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule : — What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent parts, belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted^whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or... | |
| Joseph Haven - Psychology - 1857 - 612 pages
...several steps in their order. The Law of each. — The general law or rule which governs the former, is, What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not Belong) to the constituted whole. The law of the latter is, What belongs (or not) to the containing whole, belongs (or not) to all the... | |
| Asa Mahan - Philosophy - 1857 - 396 pages
...whole, belongs (or does not belong) to each and all of the contained parts. The latter by the rule : What belongs (or does not belong) to all the constituent...belongs (or does not belong) to the constituted whole. These rules exclusively determine all formal inference ; whatever transcends or violates them, transcends... | |
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