Dentro del libro

Páginas seleccionadas

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 309 - 3rd Ed. 1. Rent. That portion of the produce of the earth which is paid to the landlord for the use of the original and indestructible powers of the soil.—p. 53. 2. Wages. The labourer's proportion of the produce. —Chap.
Página 286 - made me, and all the world: secondly, in God the Son, who " redeemed me and all mankind: thirdly, in God the Holy " Ghost, who sanctifieth me and all the elect people of God.
Página 286 - chiefly learn, in these articles of thy " belief? A. First, I learn to believe in God the Father, who " made me, and all the world: secondly, in God the Son, who " redeemed me and all mankind: thirdly, in God the Holy " Ghost, who sanctifieth me and all the elect people of God.
Página 83 - the major and minor term.) When the Middle term is made the subject of the major premiss, and the predicate of the minor, that is called the first Figure; (which is far the most natural and clear of all, as to this alone Aristotle's Dictum may be at once applied.) In the second Figure the Middle
Página 21 - not one in ten thousand that doth. But God has not been so sparing to men to make them barely two-legged creatures, and left it to Aristotle to make them rational, t. e. those few of them that he could get so to examine the grounds of syllogisms, as to see that in above threescore ways that three propositions may be laid together, there are but
Página 294 - a child of God, and an inheritor of the Kingdom of Heaven." . ...
Página 182 - a charm on the minds, especially of the ignorant and unthinking, and raise such a tumult of feeling, as will effectually blind their judgment ; so that a string of vague abuse or panegyric will often have the effect of a train of sound Argument. This artifice falls under the head of ' Irrelevant Conclusion,
Página 21 - those few of them that he could get so to examine the grounds of syllogisms, as to see that in above threescore ways that three propositions may be laid together, there are but fourteen wherein one may be sure that the conclusion 'is right,
Página 31 - when any substance is offered to his notice, the composition of which has not been ascertained, or in which adulteration is suspected. Now a fallacy may aptly be compared to some adulterated compound; *' it consists of an ingenious " mixture of truth and falsehood, so entangled, " —so intimately blended,—that the falsehood
Página 236 - other operations" of which we have been speaking, and which are preparatory to the exercise of Reasoning, are of two kinds, according to the nature of the end proposed; for Reasoning comprehends Inferring and Proving; which are not two different things, but the same thing regarded in two different points of

Información bibliográfica