[Lecture I]
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Resource ID
17850
Access
Open
Contributed by
Frederik Wellmann
type of material
A. MS. notebook
description
Published as 1.591-610, with omissions. Unpublished: Present day science suffers from a malady whose source is an argument based on the notion of a "logisches Gef,hl" as the means of determining whether reasoning is sound and whose conclusion is that there is no distinction between good and bad reasoning. This argument parallels another whose conclusion is that there is no distinction between good and bad conduct (pp. 1-12). Criticism of the defendant arguments and their premises that it is unthinkable that a conclusion be found acceptable for any other reason than a feeling of logicality and that a line of conduct be adopted for any other motive than a feeling of pleasure (pp. 33-48).
general index
ethical Conduct, Logic (modal see Modality), Logisches Gefuehl, Lowell Lectures, Reasoning (probable see also Probability)
Date
1903
number
MS0448_032
abbreviated title
-
date (Robin)
1903