10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «INDESIGNATE»
Discover the use of
indesignate in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
indesignate and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
When a man's arms and legs have been amputated, it makes little difference to
him to lose one of his ears ; and the difficulty of bringing the Indesignate
proposition into the scheme of Traditional Logic is so great, that those logicians
are wisest ...
Charles Arthur Mercier, 1912
2
Logosophistic Investigations
When a man's arms and legs have been amputated, om makes lomtle difference
logos him logos lose one mim his ears; and lam difficulty mim bringing lam
Indesignate proposomion inlogos lam scheme mim Tradomional Logo-logic is so
...
The difference is, that the indesignate leaves room for possible exceptions, the
prefix " all " peremptorily excludes such. But in using the indesignate, there is no
account taken of such exceptions. The indesignate, then, expresses a universal ...
4
An outline of logic for the use of teachers and students
When, therefore, we use an indesignate, we are really employing a universal
term 5. The former is as total in its grasp, and has exactly the same logical
bearing on the sentence, as the latter. The difi'erence is, that the indesignate
leaves room ...
Rev. Francis GARDEN, 1867
It remains to consider Indesignate and Singular propositions. Indesignate
propositions are such as have no sign of quantity. As far as form is concerned,
they may be universal, or they may be particular. If I say, ' Old men are
melancholy,' it ...
George Hayward Joyce, 1916
It remains to consider Indesignate and Singular propositions. Indesig'nate
propositions are such as have no sign of quantity. As far as form is concerned,
they may be universal, or they may be particular. If I say, ' Old men are
melancholy,' it ...
7
Studies and exercises in formal logic: including a ...
We may perhaps say with Hamilton that indesignate or preindesignate would be
a better term to employ. There can be no doubt that, as Mansel remarks, "the true
indefinite proposition is in fact the particular; the statement 'some A is B' being ...
John Neville Keynes, 1887
Similarly if the proposition 'B of C' is indesignate, so long as it is affirmative; we
get the same conclusion whether the premiss is indesignate or particular. If the
minor term occurs in a universal premiss, affirmative or negative, there will be no
...
Propositions of this kind are known as Indesignate or Pre-indesignate
Propositions ; and in reducing them we may guide ourselves by the following
roles : 1. An Indesignate Proposition is universal if, when it is read according to
the predicative ...
William Ralph Boyce Gibson, Augusta Klein, 1908
10
Between Reason and Revelation: Twin Wisdoms Reconciled
The categorical sentence (ḥukm-i batt) is as when someone says, 'Man is a writer
' (mardum dabīr ast).180 But man may be a writer just as he may also not be a
writer. [74] He says further that [single] words are all 'indesignate' (muhmal).181 ...