438 



THE SCIENCE OF LOGIC 



Mechanical conceptions in science, ii., 



J 3 2 -3- 

 Mediate axioms, of syllogism, i., 299-301, 



324- 



inference, i., 292-3 ; and categorical 

 syllogisms, 385-92 ; and hypothetical 

 syllogisms, 361-2; from particulars, 

 392-5 ; remote and proximate materials 

 of, 409-10. 



MELLONE, Dr. S. H., on denial, i., 204 ; 

 on collective premisses in syllogism, 

 402 ; ii. 9 ; on geometrical definitions, 

 ii., 25 ; on scholastic view of induction, 

 33 ; on uniformity of nature, 72-3, 97- 

 8, 114, 117 ; on cause and effect, 81-2 ; 

 on efficiency and necessity, 73 ; on 

 plurality of causes, 86-7, 90 ; on verifi 

 cation of hypothesis, 142 ; on analogy, 

 155, 157 ; on experimental methods, 

 173-86, 194 ; on intermixture of effects, 

 196 ; on residual phenomena, 197 ; on 

 fact and law, 208 ; on demonstration, 

 227-8 ; on deduction and induction, 

 244-5 ; on enthymeme, 266-7. 



Membra dividentia, i., 112. 



Memory, and physical certitude, ii., 215. 



Metaphor, i., 43-4 ; ii., 161, 332. 



Metaphysical certitude, ii., 106 ; nature 

 and source of, 214-15 ; of God s exist 

 ence, 235. 



necessity, i., 170-80 ; as abstract and 

 hypothetical, ii., 217-23. 



analysis, i., 93, 114. 



laws or principles, ii., 106, 217-23. 



judgments and propositions, i., 170-80. 

 Metaphysics, and logic, i., 30-3, 135, 



J 45-7&amp;gt; 2 52 ; ii-, *6 sqq. ; 111-13, I3- 



Metathesis, i., 336. 



Method, i., 19, 378; ii., 1-22; didactic 

 and inventive, 7 ; analytico-synthetic, 

 9; of teaching, 14-16; scholastic, 16- 

 22 ; deductive and inductive, 48-9 ; in 

 physical science, mediaeval and 

 modern, 128-35 ; of perceptual induc 

 tive analysis, 165-72 ; fallacies incident 

 to, 315-37; experimental &quot;methods,&quot; 

 172-200 ; scope of, 197-201 ; methods 

 of measurement, 204-5. 



Methodology, ii., i, 13-14, 253. 



MERCIER, Cardinal, i., 91, 101, 145; on 

 the Dictum de omni, 301-3, 318; on 

 necessary judgment as premiss of in 

 ference, 405 ; on discovery by inference, 

 409; on method, ii., 10 ; 16, 21; ex 

 amples of inductive process, 45-7, 56- 

 7 ; on uniformity of nature, 96 ; on 

 hypothesis, 120-1, 127, 138, 139, 150; 

 on truth, 210; on demonstration, 228 ; 

 on statistics, 285 sqq. 



Metrology, ii., 203. 



MICHAEL PSELLUS, i., 318. 



Middle Ages, and method, ii., 4, 10 ; and 

 induction. 35-7 ; and history, 255. 



Middle term, i., 294-5 5 undistributed, 308- 

 9, 317 ; finding middle terms, 332-4 ; 

 ii, 53-4, 244-8 ; and &quot; cause,&quot; 227-8, 

 247-8. 



MILL, J. S., i., 10 ; on definition, 101 ; 

 on classification, 127; on categories, 

 149-50 ; on connotative reading of 

 judgments, 209; on immediate infer 

 ence, 234 ; on existential import, 258 ; 

 Nota notae, 303-4 ; on inference from 

 particulars, 393-7 ; on the syllogism as 

 a petitio principii, 401-4 ; ii., 30, 39 ; 

 on induction, 42-3, 122 ; on &quot; deduc 

 tive,&quot; method in induction, 45, 198, 

 247 ; sensism, 59, 74, 79, 104-5 ; on 

 &quot; cause,&quot; 76-80, 128-31 ; on plurality 

 of causes, 86 ; on uniformity of nature, 

 98-9, 102-5, IIO II 6, 321-22 ; on laws 

 of nature, 146; on analogy, 153, 156; 

 on experimental methods, 169, 172- 

 200 ; classification of fallacies, 298-9, 

 306, 307- 



Minima sensibilia, ii., 202. 



Minor premiss, i., 295, 367. 



term, i., 294, 351-2. 



illicit process of, i., 309. 



Miracles and method, ii., 255. 

 Mixed demonstration, ii., 233-5. 



syllogisms, i., 297-8 ; hypothetical, 

 358-62 ; not immediate inferences, 361- 

 2 ; in induction, ii., 49-50; disjunctive, 

 i., 363-6 ; in induction, ii., 39, 50-2. 



Mnemonic lines for moods of syllogism, 

 i., 326, 336 ; older forms of, 352. 



Modal judgments and propositions, i., 

 180-5, 227, 261, 284, 289, 290. 



Modality, objective, i., 180-3 ! subjective, 



183-5- 



Modi dicendi, per se and per accidens, i., 

 171-4. 



Modus, in proposition, i., 180-1 ; in syllo 

 gism, 320, 359-60, 364-5. 



MONAHAN, ii., 141, 143. 



Monism, ii., 60, 105-7, II2 221-3, 242 ; 



323-4- 



Monuments, ii., 256. 



Moods, of syllogism, i., 320-31; and ex 

 istential import, 331-2 ; indirect moods, 

 351 ; of hypothetical syllogism, 357- 

 60 ; of disjunctive syllogism, 364-5 ; 

 of dilemma, 370. 



Moral certitude, ii., 150-1 ; nature and 

 source of, 215, 217, 221, 248-50, 259, 

 262. 



laws, ii., 249-50. 



necessity, i., 183, 404-5. 



obligation, necessity of, ii., 78. 



universals, i., 201; ii., 217, 262, 265, 



Motio, tnotus, actio et passio, ii., 81-2. 

 MULLER, Max, on categories and speech, 



i., 144-5. 

 Multiple quantification, i., 197. 



