First Notions of Logic: Preparatory to the Study of Geometry First Notions of Logic: Preparatory to the Study of Geometry

First Notions of Logic: Preparatory to the Study of Geometry

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Descrição da editora

What we here mean by Logic is the examination of that part of reasoning which depends upon the manner in which inferences are formed, and the investigation of general maxims and rules for constructing arguments, so that the conclusion may contain no inaccuracy which was not previously asserted in the premises. It has nothing to do with the truth of the facts, opinions, or presumptions, from which an inference is derived; but simply takes care that the inference shall certainly be true, if the premises be true. Thus, when we say that all men will die, and that all men are rational beings, and thence infer that some rational beings will die, the logical truth of this sentence is the same whether it be true or false that men are mortal and rational. This logical truth depends upon the structure of the sentence, and not on the particular matters spoken of. The second of these is the same proposition, logically considered, as the first; the consequence in both is virtually contained in, and rightly inferred from, the premises. Whether the premises be true or false, is not a question of logic, but of morals, philosophy, history, or any other knowledge to which their subject-matter belongs: the question of logic is, does the conclusion certainly follow if the premises be true?

Every act of reasoning must mainly consist in comparing together different things, and either finding out, or recalling from previous knowledge, the points in which they resemble or differ from each other. That particular part of reasoning which is called inference, consists in the comparison of several and different things with one and the same other thing; and ascertaining the resemblances, or differences, of the several things, by means of the points in which they resemble, or differ from, the thing with which all are compared.

There must then be some propositions already obtained before any inference can be drawn. All propositions are either assertions or denials, and are thus divided into affirmative and negative. Thus, A is B, and A is not B, are the two forms to which all propositions may be reduced. These are, for our present purpose, the most simple forms; though it will frequently happen that much circumlocution is needed to reduce propositions to them. Thus, suppose the following assertion, ‘If he should come to-morrow, he will probably stay till Monday’; how is this to be reduced to the form A is B? There is evidently something spoken of, something said of it, and an affirmative connexion between them. Something, if it happen, that is, the happening of something, makes the happening of another something probable; or is one of the things which render the happening of the second thing probable.

GÊNERO
Ciência e natureza
LANÇADO
2021
24 de dezembro
IDIOMA
EN
Inglês
PÁGINAS
42
EDITORA
Library of Alexandria
VENDEDOR
The Library of Alexandria
TAMANHO
402,1
KB

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