No art treats of particular cases, for particulars are infinite and cannot be known.' No one who holds the doctrine that reasoning may be from particulars to particulars can be supposed to have the most rudimentary notion of what constitutes reasoning... Scientific Theism - Página 42por Francis Ellingwood Abbot - 1885 - 219 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| William Stanley Jevons - 1874 - 524 páginas
...OvSefj.la Se Te\vn VKOTTti TO /ca$' eKacrrov ... TO <5e Katf e/caaroc a-TTetpov, KOI OVK «ri<7T)jToV. ' No art treats of particular cases; for particulars...notion of what constitutes reasoning and science. At the same time there can be no doubt that practically what we find to be true of many similar objects... | |
| William Stanley Jevons - 1874 - 984 páginas
...opinion — Se Te^vt] (TKoirei TO /ca0' eKacrrov . . . TO oe Ka8' eKacrrov v, /cat owe eV«rTi;ToV. ' No art treats of particular cases ; for particulars...particulars to particulars, can be supposed to have a Aristotle's 'Rhetoric,' Liber I. 2. n. the most rudimentary notion of what constitutes reasoning... | |
| 1882 - 548 páginas
...are infinite T( vyi) (ricoiret то кав' fKatrrov . . . то Ы кав' enatrrov âirtipov Kai OVK and cannot be known.' No one who holds the doctrine...impossible to study even a particular case without generalising ; all knowledge consists in the seizure of the relations of things, and every name of... | |
| 1882 - 646 páginas
...Sf KOd' fKdfTTOV dTTdlJOV KOI OVK and cannot be known.' No one who holds the doctrine that misomn; may be from particulars to particulars can be supposed...notion of what constitutes reasoning and science." without generalising; all knowledge consists in the seizure of the relations of things, and every name... | |
| Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse - 1896 - 660 páginas
...reasoning consists in inferring of anything what we know of similar objects," proceeds to tell us, that "no one who holds the doctrine that reasoning may...notion of what constitutes reasoning and science." \Ve can only reply that no one who makes these two statements within two pages can bo supposed to have... | |
| William Forbes Cooley - 1912 - 272 páginas
...nature of the case could happen but once. We shall have to return later to 1Cf. Aristotle's remark, "No art treats of particular cases; for particulars are infinite, and cannot be known." Quoted by Jevons, "Prine. of Science," p. 595. this important distinction that science is general,... | |
| Harro Maas - 2005 - 364 páginas
...understanding of science that focussed on particulars as its source of evidence was essentially flawed: "No one who holds the doctrine that reasoning may be from particulars to particulars [as Mill did], can be supposed to have the most rudimentary notion of what constitutes reasoning and... | |
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