| Richard Whately - Logic - 1854 - 410 pages
...Maxim nsm in the forecvery vaargument is in reality an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (ie .affirmed or denied) universally, of any Class of...(viz. affirmed or denied) of any thing comprehended in * Lord Kames. t This excellent illustration is cited from a passage in an anonymous pamphlet, " An... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1854 - 428 pages
...syllogistic reasoning ; or, ns Mr. Bailey calls it, "class reasoning." The maxim is, "Whatever is predicated universally of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner of anything comprehended in that class. "—See Bailey, p. 64. Nothing that must be repented of is... | |
| Richard Whately - Logic - 1854 - 496 pages
...application of which, every valid argument is in reality an instance, is, " that whatever is predicated (te affirmed or denied) universally, of any Class of things, may be predicated, ia like manner, (viz. affirmed ordenied) of any thing comprehended in that Class." This is the principle,... | |
| Robert Gordon Latham - Language and logic - 1856 - 308 pages
...outside the shell, the embryo within the kernel must do the same. Hence — " 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 called the dictum de omni et nullo, ie the rule concerning... | |
| Robert Gordon Latham - 1856 - 324 pages
...outside the shell, the embryo within the kernel must do the same. Hence — " 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 called the dictum de onmi et nullo, ie the rule concerning... | |
| Charles Bernard Gibson - 1857 - 312 pages
...; but I should, notwithstanding, be obliged to you to explain it to me." " Its principle is simply this, that whatever is predicated, that is, affirmed or denied, universally, of any class of persons or things, is, in like manner, predicated, that is, affirmed or denied, of any person or thing,... | |
| Richard Whately - Logic - 1857 - 304 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, may be predicated, in like manner, (mz. affirmed or denied) of any thing comprehended in that Class." This is the principle, commonly... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1857 - 416 pages
...syllogistic reasoning ; or, as Mr. Bailey calls it, "class reasoning." The maxi:n is, "Whatever is predicated universally of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner of anything comprehended in that class." — See Bailey, p. C4. Nothing that must be repented of is... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1857 - 416 pages
...syllogistic reasoning ; or, as Mr. Bailey calls it, "class reasoning." The maxim is, "Whatever is predicated universally of any class of things, may be predicated in like manner of anything comprehended in that class."— See Bailey, p. 64. Nothing that must be repented of is... | |
| William Fleming - Philosophy - 1860 - 912 pages
...terms Y and not Y." l DICTUM DE OMNI ET NULLO may be explained to mean "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." — V. CONTRADICTION. DICTUM SIMPLICITER. — When a term or... | |
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