Logic [in the narrow sense]

Keyword: Logic [in the narrow sense]


Dictionary Entry | Posted 10/08/2017
Quote from "Definitions for Baldwin's Dictionary [R]"

…in a narrower sense, logic is the science of the reference of symbols to their objects. For logic in this narrower sense, all symbols which have precisely the same...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 26/08/2015
Quote from "Logic: Fragments [R]"

Logic, in general, seems to be the science of what is universally true respecting scientific representations. In a narrow sense, logic is the science of the general...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 31/01/2013
Quote from "Short Logic"

The sciences of speculative grammar, logic, and speculative rhetoric may be called the philosophical trivium.

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Harvard Lectures on the Logic of Science. Lecture X: Grounds of Induction"

Symbols, as such, are subject to three laws one of which is the conditio sine qua non of its standing for anything, the second of its translating anything,...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Teleological Logic"

The science of the general conditions to which every symbol is subjected in so far as it is related
       | a logos is General Grammar
  to | a language is General...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Harvard Lectures on the Logic of Science. Lecture VIII: Forms of Induction and Hypothesis"

The science of the general laws of relations of symbols to logoi is general grammar. The science of the general laws of their relations to objects is logic. And the...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "On a New List of Categories"

We come, therefore, to this, that logic treats of the reference of symbols in general to their objects. In this view it is one of a trivium of conceivable sciences. ...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Phaneroscopy"

… I extend logic to embrace all the necessary principles of semeiotic, and I recognize a logic of icons, and a logic of indices, as well as a logic of symbols; and in this last I recognize three...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Cambridge Lectures on Reasoning and the Logic of Things: Detached Ideas continued and the Dispute between Nominalists and Realists"

There are three ways in which signs can be studied, first as to the general conditions of their having any meaning, which is the Grammatica Speculativa of...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "On Signs [R]"

In consequence of every representamen being thus connected with three things, the ground, the object, and the interpretant, the science of semiotic has three branches....

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Logic of Mathematics: An attempt to develop my categories from within"

But besides being logical in the sense of demanding a logical analysis, our inquiry also relates to two as a conception of logic. The term “logic” is unscientifically by me...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "The Regenerated Logic"

“Exact” logic, in its widest sense, will (as I apprehend) consist of three parts. For it will be necessary, first of all, to study those properties of beliefs which...

Dictionary Entry | Posted 27/01/2013
Quote from "Minute Logic: Chapter I. Intended Characters of this Treatise"

Logic is the science of the general necessary laws of Signs and especially of Symbols. As such, it has three departments. Obsistent logic, logic in the narrow sense, or...