CONTENTS

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PAGE
Editor’s Note 3
Abbreviations 9
CHAPTER
I. The Indefinables of Logic 11
II. Objective Validity of the “Laws of Thought” 15
III. Identity 16
IV. Identity of Classes 18
V. Ethical Applications of the Law of Identity 19
VI. The Law of Contradiction in Modern Logic 21
VII. Symbolism and Meaning 22
VIII. Nominalism 24
IX. Ambiguity and Symbolic Logic 26
X. Logical Addition and the Utility of Symbolism 27
XI. Criticism 29
XII. Historical Criticism 30
XIII. Is the Mind in the Head? 31
XIV. The Pragmatist Theory of Truth 32
XV. Assertion 34
XVI. The Commutative Law 35
XVII. Universal and Particular Propositions 36
XVIII. Denial of Generality and Generality of Denial 37
XIX. Implication 39
XX. Dignity 43
XXI. The Synthetic Nature of Deduction 45
XXII. The Mortality of Socrates 48
XXIII. Denoting 53
XXIV. The 54
XXV. Non-Entity 56
XXVI. Is 58
XXVII. And and Or 59
XXVIII. The Conversion of Relations 60
XXIX. Previous Philosophical Theories of Mathematics 61
XXX. Finite and Infinite 63
XXXI. The Mathematical Attainments of Tristram Shandy 64
XXXII. The Hardships of a Man with an Unlimited Income 66
XXXIII. The Relations of Magnitude of Cardinal Numbers 69
XXXIV. The Unknowable 70
XXXV. Mr. Spencer, the Athanasian Creed, and the Articles 73
XXXVI. The Humour of Mathematicians 74
XXXVII. The Paradoxes of Logic

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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