-Verbal and Real Predication, 105
CHAPTER III.
Aristotle's Categories, 112
CHAPTER IV.
The Controversy about Universals--Difficulties concerning
the Relation of General Names to Thought and to Reality, 120
PART III.
THE INTERPRETATION OF PROPOSITIONS.
CHAPTER I.
Theories of Predication--Theories of Judgment, 131
CHAPTER II.
The "Opposition" of Propositions--The Interpretation of
"No," 139
CHAPTER III.
The Implication of Propositions--Immediate Formal Inference
--Eduction, 146
CHAPTER IV.
The Counter-Implication of Propositions, 156
PART IV.
THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF PROPOSITIONS.
CHAPTER I.
The Syllogism, 167
CHAPTER II.
The Figures and Moods of the Syllogism. (1) The First
Figure. (2) The Minor Figures and their Reduction to
the First. (3) Sorites, 173
CHAPTER III.
The Demonstration of the Syllogistic Moods--The Canons
of the Syllogism, 185
CHAPTER IV.
The Analysis of Arguments into Syllogistic Forms, 196
CHAPTER V.
Enthymemes, 205
CHAPTER VI.
The Utility of the Syllogism, 209
CHAPTER VII.
Conditional Arguments--Hypothetical Syllogism, Disjunctive
Syllogism and Dilemma, 215
CHAPTER VIII.
Fallacies in Deductive Argument--_Petitio Principii_ and
_Ignoratio Elenchi_, 226
CHAPTER IX.
Formal or Aristotelian Induction--Inductive Argument--The
Inductive Syllogism, 235
BOOK II.
INDUCTIVE LOGIC, OR THE LOGIC OF SCIENCE.
Introduction, 243
CHAPTER I.
The Data of Experience as Grounds of Inference or Rational
Belief, 273
CHAPTER II.
Ascertainment of Simple Facts in their Order--Personal
Observation--Hearsay Evidence--Method of Testing
Traditional Evidence,
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