CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER III. Of the Things denoted ly Names. 



PAGE 



1. Necessity of an enumeration of Nameable Things. The 



Categories of Aristotle . .49 



2. Ambiguity of the most general names 



3. Peelings, or states of consciousness 54 



4. Feelings must be distinguished from their physical antece 



dents. Perceptions, what . .56 



5. Volitions, and Actions, what .... 



6. Substance and Attribute . . .59 



7. Body 61 



8. Mind . ... 67 



9. Qualities . . 



10. Relations . . .... 72 



11. Resemblance ..... 



12. Quantity . . .... 78 



13. All attributes of bodies are grounded on states of con- 



7Q 

 sciousness .... 



14. So also all attributes of mind . . .80 



15. Recapitulation . . .81 



CHAPTER IV. Of Propositions. 



1. Nature and office of the copula 



2. Affirmative and Negative propositions . . .87 



3. Simple and Complex .... 



4. Universal, Particular, and Singular 93 



CHAPTER V. Of the Import of Propositions. 



1. Doctrine that a proposition is the expression of a relation 



between two ideas . ... 96 



2. Doctrine that it is the expression of a relation between the 



meanings of two names . . .99 



3. Doctrine that it consists in referring something to, or ex 



cluding something from, a class . 103 



4. What it really is . . . . 107 



5. It asserts (or denies) a sequence, a coexistence, a simple 



existence, a causation . 



6. or a resemblance . ^&quot; 



7. Propositions of which the terms are abstract . 115 



