Chapter 1 of 29 · 259 words · ~1 min read

CHAPTER III

. OF THE THINGS DENOTED BY NAMES.

I. Feelings, or States of Consciousness. II. Substances. III. Attributes: and, first, Qualities. IV. Relations. V. Quantity. VI. Attributes Concluded. VII. General Results.

## CHAPTER IV . OF PROPOSITIONS.

## CHAPTER V . OF THE IMPORT OF PROPOSITIONS.

## CHAPTER VI . OF PROPOSITIONS MERELY VERBAL.

## CHAPTER VII . OF THE NATURE OF CLASSIFICATION, AND THE FIVE PREDICABLES.

## CHAPTER VIII . OF DEFINITION.

## BOOK II. OF REASONING.

## CHAPTER I . OF INFERENCE, OR REASONING, IN GENERAL.

## CHAPTER II . OF RATIOCINATION, OR SYLLOGISM.

## CHAPTER III . OF THE FUNCTIONS, AND LOGICAL VALUE, OF THE SYLLOGISM.

## CHAPTER IV . OF TRAINS OF REASONING, AND DEDUCTIVE SCIENCES.

## CHAPTER V . OF DEMONSTRATION, AND NECESSARY TRUTHS.

## CHAPTER VI . THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED.

## BOOK III. OF INDUCTION.

## CHAPTER I . PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS ON INDUCTION IN GENERAL.

## CHAPTER II . OF INDUCTIONS IMPROPERLY SO CALLED.

## CHAPTER III . OF THE GROUND OF INDUCTION.

## CHAPTER IV . OF LAWS OF NATURE.

## CHAPTER V . OF THE LAW OF UNIVERSAL CAUSATION.

## CHAPTER VI . OF THE COMPOSITION OF CAUSES.

## CHAPTER VII . OF OBSERVATION AND EXPERIMENT.

## CHAPTER VIII . OF THE FOUR METHODS OF EXPERIMENTAL INQUIRY.

## CHAPTER IX . MISCELLANEOUS EXAMPLES OF THE FOUR METHODS.

## CHAPTER X . OF PLURALITY OF CAUSES; AND OF THE INTERMIXTURE OF EFFECTS.

## CHAPTER XI . OF THE DEDUCTIVE METHOD.

## CHAPTER XII . OF THE EXPLANATION OF LAWS OF NATURE.

##