| 1921 - 472 pages
...6.) "The appropriate problem of logic [is] the estimation of evidence." (Ibid., bk. 4, ch. 1, § 1.) "The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...those arguments are conclusive, and not otherwise." (Ibid., bk. 3, ch. 9, § 6.) Bain (Logic, vol. 2, p. 49) largely agrees with this: "Proof, more than... | |
| Thomas Fowler - 1870 - 372 pages
...inductive arguments may ultimately be analysed. ' The business of Inductive Logic/ says Mr. Mill, ' is to provide rules and models (such as the Syllogism...any one sought to reduce the practice to theory.' With regard to the second objection, that these methods have not been operative in the formation of... | |
| George Grote - 1872 - 518 pages
...the rules of the Syllogism are for interpretation of Induction" (Bk. III. ch. is 1, p. 313.) — " The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...before any one sought to reduce the practice to theory" (Bk. III. ch. ix. s. 5, p. 471, 5th ed.) — See also the same point of view more copiously set forth,... | |
| George Grote - 1872 - 508 pages
...the rules of the Syllogism are for interpretation of Induction" (Bk. III. eh. L s. l, p. 313.) — " The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...Four Methods profess to be, and what I believe they arc universally considered to be by experimental philosophers, who liad practised all of them long... | |
| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1883 - 584 pages
...proof, by which we can go from facts to universals ? For that is the claim which the Canons set up. "The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...otherwise. This is what the Four Methods profess to be." JS Mill, Logic, Bk. III. ix. § 6. " In saying that no discoveries were ever made by the four Methods,... | |
| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1883 - 568 pages
...proof, by which we can go from facts to universals ? For that is the claim which the Canons set up. "The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...arguments conform, those arguments are conclusive, and not othenvise. This is what the Four Methods profess to be." JS Mill, Logic, Bk. III. ix. § 6. " In saying... | |
| Thomas Fowler - 1887 - 612 pages
...inductive arguments may ultimately be arranged. ' The business of Inductive Logic,' says Mr. Mill, 'is to provide rules and models (such as the Syllogism...any one sought to reduce the practice to theory.' With regard to the second objection, that these methods have not been operative in the formation of... | |
| Henry Hughes - 1894 - 284 pages
...having relation to four methods of discovery. On the subject of these methods he writes as follows :—" The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...any one sought to reduce the practice to theory." 2 1 Bk. III. ch. vi. § 3. 2 Bk. III. ch. ix. § 6. II. His first method is called by Mill the method... | |
| Thomas Fowler - 1895 - 620 pages
...inductive arguments may ultimately be arranged. ' The business of Inductive Logic," says Mr. Mill, ' is to provide rules and models (such as the Syllogism...any one sought to reduce the practice to theory.' of a method. It is undoubtedly true that in records of scientific investigations we seldom find the... | |
| Noah Knowles Davis - 1895 - 224 pages
...of proving propositions, and only in an incidental way does it aid in suggesting them. He says : " The business of Inductive Logic is to provide rules...and its rules are for ratiocination) to which, if the inductive arguments conform, those arguments are conclusive, and not otherwise. This is what the... | |
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