xvi CONTENTS OF VOLUME I. 



PART II. 



JUDGMENTS AND PROPOSITIONS. 



CHAPTER I. 

 NATURE OF JUDGMENT AND PROPOSITIONS. 



PACE 



78. Nature of the Mental Process of Judgment: Structure of the Proposi 



tion 154 



79. Judgment and Truth : Conception : Inference 158 



80. The Truth of Judgment is Objective, Universal, and Immutable . . 160 



81. Matter and Form of the Judgment: Its &quot; Abstract &quot; Character . . 162 



82. Interpretation of Terms and of Prepositional Forms : Formulation : 



&quot; Meaning&quot; and &quot;Implications&quot; of the Proposition . . . .164 



CHAPTER II. 

 KINDS OF JUDGMENTS AND PROPOSITIONS. 



83. Problems on Import of Judgment : Basis and Aim of Classification of 



Judgments 167 



84. Judgments Classified according to Relation 169 



85. &quot; Necessary&quot; and &quot; Contingent &quot; Judgments with their Synonyms . . 170 



86. Propositiones per se notae &quot; and &quot; Modi dicendi per se &quot; . . . . 171 



87. Is the Distinction Objective or Subjective ? 174 



88. Comparison of the Scholastic with the Kantian View .... 177 



89. Modality in Categorical Judgments ....... 180 



90. The Subjective View of Modality 183 



CHAPTER III. 



QUANTITY AND QUALITY OF CATEGORICAL JUDGMENTS AND PROPOSITIONS. 



91. Traditional Fourfold Scheme of Propositions ; Distribution of Terms . 186 



92. Universal Propositions 188 



93. Particular or Indefinite Propositions 194 



94. Plurative and Numerical Propositions : Multiple of Quantification : 



Complex Propositions 195 



95. Exponible Propositions 198 



96. Indesignate Propositions 200 



97. Affirmation and Negation ......... 202 



98. Nature of Significant Denial : Its Relation to Affirmation; Its Grounds . 203 



CHAPTER IV. 

 EXTENSION AND INTENSION IN CATEGORICAL JUDGMENTS AND PROPOSITIONS. 



99. Possibility of Various Meanings in the Propositions .... 207 



100. Predicative or Attributive Interpretation 207 



101. Reverse of Predicative Interpretation 208 



