Book I. Of Reasoning in General. Introduction. The Association of Ideas
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Resource ID
831
Access
Open
Contributed by
Frederik Wellmann
type of material
A. MS.
Category
LOGIC (MS 339-1009)
description
Published in part as 7.388-450, except 392n7. Unpublished: pp. 14-51, with exception of proposition 3 on p. 23 which was published as 7.417n21. History of the doctrine of association which begins with Aristotle and continues with the English writers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, e.g., Digby, Locke, Hume, Hartley, Gay, among others, and the nineteenth-century English, German, and American thinkers, e.g., James Mill, Hamilton, Bain, Lewes, James, Herbart, Wundt. "Notwithstanding the writer's realism and realistic idealism, and consequent high appreciation of Schelling, Hegel, and others, and respect for German industry, he cannot but regard the English work in philosophy as far more valuable and English logic as infinitely sounder."
general index
Aristotle, Bain Alexander, Digby Everard, Gay John, Hamilton Sir William, Hartley David, Hegel Georg W. F., Herbart Johann Friedrich, Hume David, association of Ideas, James William, Lewes George Henry, Locke John, Logic (modal see Modality), history of Logic, Mill James, The "Grand Logic" ("How to Reason: A Critic of Arguments'), German America, Reasoning (probable see also Probability), Schelling Friedrich, Wundt Wilhelm
pagination
pp. 9-83, 17-19; plus two drafts (5 pp.) of "contents."
Date
1893
manuscript number
400
publication
G-1893-5
topic
LOGIC / GRAND LOGIC 1893
manuscript contains non-textual content
no