The Art of Logical Thinking (or the Laws of Reasoning)
Book Details
Author(s)William Walker Atkinson
PublisherBZ editores
ISBN / ASINB00B0X8JVI
ISBN-13978B00B0X8JV8
Sales Rank432,483
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
REASONING
THE PROCESS OF REASONING
THE CONCEPT
THE USE OF CONCEPTS
CONCEPTS AND IMAGES
TERMS
THE MEANING OF TERMS
JUDGMENTS
PROPOSITIONS
IMMEDIATE REASONING
INDUCTIVE REASONING
REASONING BY INDUCTION
THEORY AND HYPOTHESES
MAKING AND TESTING HYPOTHESES
DEDUCTIVE REASONING
THE SYLLOGISM
VARIETIES OF SYLLOGISMS
REASONING BY ANALOGY
FALLACIES
The processes of Reasoning may be said to comprise four general stages or steps, as follows:
I. Abstraction, by which is meant the process of drawing off and setting aside from an object, person or thing, a quality or attribute, and making of it a distinct object of thought. For instance, if I perceive in a lion the quality of strength, and am able to think of this quality abstractly and independently of the animal—if the term strength has an actual mental meaning to me, independent of the lion—then I have abstracted that quality; the thinking thereof is an act of abstraction; and the thought-idea itself is an abstract idea. Some writers hold that these abstract ideas are realities, and "not mere figments of fancy." As Brooks says: "The rose dies, but my idea of its color and fragrance remains." Other authorities regard Abstraction as but an act of attention concentrated upon but the particular quality to the exclusion of others, and that the abstract idea has no existence apart from the general idea of the object in which it is included. Sir William Hamilton says: "We can rivet our attention on some particular mode of a thing, as its smell, its color, its figure, its size, etc., and abstract it from the others. This may be called Modal Abstraction. The abstraction we have now been considering is performed on individual objects, and is consequently particular. There is nothing necessarily connected with generalization in abstraction; generalization is indeed dependent on abstraction, which it supposes; but abstraction does not involve generalization."
THE PROCESS OF REASONING
THE CONCEPT
THE USE OF CONCEPTS
CONCEPTS AND IMAGES
TERMS
THE MEANING OF TERMS
JUDGMENTS
PROPOSITIONS
IMMEDIATE REASONING
INDUCTIVE REASONING
REASONING BY INDUCTION
THEORY AND HYPOTHESES
MAKING AND TESTING HYPOTHESES
DEDUCTIVE REASONING
THE SYLLOGISM
VARIETIES OF SYLLOGISMS
REASONING BY ANALOGY
FALLACIES
The processes of Reasoning may be said to comprise four general stages or steps, as follows:
I. Abstraction, by which is meant the process of drawing off and setting aside from an object, person or thing, a quality or attribute, and making of it a distinct object of thought. For instance, if I perceive in a lion the quality of strength, and am able to think of this quality abstractly and independently of the animal—if the term strength has an actual mental meaning to me, independent of the lion—then I have abstracted that quality; the thinking thereof is an act of abstraction; and the thought-idea itself is an abstract idea. Some writers hold that these abstract ideas are realities, and "not mere figments of fancy." As Brooks says: "The rose dies, but my idea of its color and fragrance remains." Other authorities regard Abstraction as but an act of attention concentrated upon but the particular quality to the exclusion of others, and that the abstract idea has no existence apart from the general idea of the object in which it is included. Sir William Hamilton says: "We can rivet our attention on some particular mode of a thing, as its smell, its color, its figure, its size, etc., and abstract it from the others. This may be called Modal Abstraction. The abstraction we have now been considering is performed on individual objects, and is consequently particular. There is nothing necessarily connected with generalization in abstraction; generalization is indeed dependent on abstraction, which it supposes; but abstraction does not involve generalization."










