C I^ T E N T S. 



INTHODUCTIOK 

 c. 



A definition at the commencement of a subject must be provisional 

 Is Logic the art and science of reasoning? 

 Or the art and science of the pursuit of truth ? 

 Logic is concerned with inferences, not with intuitive trutlis 

 Relation of Logic to the otlier sciences . . 

 Its utility, how shown 

 Uefinitiuu of Logic stated and illustrated 



BOOK I. 

 OF NAMES AND PROPOSITIONS. 



Chapter I. I 



0/ the Necessity of commencing with an \ 

 Analysis of Languaye. 



BEC. PAGE 



1. Theory of names, why a necessary | 



part of Ix»«ic ii ; 



2. First step in the analysis of Pro- I 



positions . . .. . . . . 12 | 



3. Names must be studied before i 



things 13 



Chapter II. 

 Of Names. 



1. Names ore names of things, not of 



our ideas 



2. Words which are not names, but 



pai ts of names 



3. General and Singular names 



4. Concrete and Abstract 



5. Connotative and Non-counoiative 



6. Positive and Negative 



7. Relative and A b-olute 



8. Univocal and ^Equivocal . . 



Chapter III. 

 Of the Things denoted by Names. 



1. Necessity of an enumeration of 



Nameable Things. The Cate- 

 gories of Aristotle . . . . . . 29 



2. Ambiguity of the most general 



names . . . . 30 



3. Feelings, or states of consciousness 



4. Feelings must be distinguislied 



from theii- physical antecedents. 

 Perceptions, what, 



5. Volitions and Actions, what 



6. Substance and Atti ibute . . 



7. Body . . 



8. Mind 



9. Qualities 

 10. Relations 



n. Resemblance.. 



12. Quantity 



13. All attributes of bodies are 



grounded on states of conscious- 

 ness 



14. So also all attributes of mind . . 



15. Recapitulation 



PAGE 

 32 



Chapter IV. 



Of Propositions. 



Nature and office of the copula . . 49 

 Affirmative and Negative proposi- 

 tions 51 



Simple and Complex . . . . 52 



Universal, Particular, and Singular 54 



Chapter V. 



Of the Import oj Propositions. 



I. Doctrine that a Proposition is the 

 expression of a relation between 

 two ideas 55 



