The Project Gutenberg EBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of John Stuart Mill, by John Stuart Mill This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of John Stuart Mill Author: John Stuart Mill Editor: David Widger Release Date: January 1, 2019 [EBook #58583] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDEX OF THE PG WORKS OF J. S. MILL *** Produced by David Widger
Preface | |
Chapter I | To What Extent Forms of Government are a Matter of Choice. |
Chapter II | The Criterion of a Good Form of Government. |
Chapter III | That the ideally best Form of Government is Representative Government. |
Chapter IV | Under what Social Conditions Representative Government is Inapplicable. |
Chapter V | Of the Proper Functions of Representative Bodies. |
Chapter VI | Of the Infirmities and Dangers to which Representative Government is Liable. |
Chapter VII | Of True and False Democracy; Representation of All, and Representation of the Majority only. |
Chapter VIII | Of the Extension of the Suffrage. |
Chapter IX | Should there be Two Stages of Election? |
Chapter X | Of the Mode of Voting. |
Chapter XI | Of the Duration of Parliaments. |
Chapter XII | Ought Pledges to be Required from Members of Parliament? |
Chapter XIII | Of a Second Chamber. |
Chapter XIV | Of the Executive in a Representative Government. |
Chapter XV | Of Local Representative Bodies. |
Chapter XVI | Of Nationality, as connected with Representative Government. |
Chapter XVII | Of Federal Representative Governments. |
Chapter XVIII | Of the Government of Dependencies by a Free State. |
Footnotes |
CHAPTER I | 1806-1819 — CHILDHOOD AND EARLY EDUCATION |
CHAPTER II | 1813-1821 — MORAL INFLUENCES IN EARLY YOUTH — MY FATHER'S CHARACTER AND OPINIONS |
CHAPTER III | 1821-1823 — LAST STAGE OF EDUCATION, AND FIRST OF SELF-EDUCATION |
CHAPTER IV | 1823-1828 — YOUTHFUL PROPAGANDISM. THE "WESTMINSTER REVIEW" |
CHAPTER V | 1826-1832 — CRISIS IN MY MENTAL HISTORY. ONE STAGE ONWARD |
CHAPTER VI. | 1830-1840 — COMMENCEMENT OF THE MOST VALUABLE FRIENDSHIP OF MY LIFE—MY FATHER'S DEATH—WRITINGS AND OTHER PROCEEDINGS UP TO 1840 |
CHAPTER VII. | 1840-1870 — GENERAL VIEW OF THE REMAINDER OF MY LIFE.—COMPLETION OF THE "SYSTEM OF LOGIC"—PUBLICATION OF THE "PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY" —MARRIAGE—RETIREMENT FROM THE INDIA HOUSE—PUBLICATION OF "LIBERTY" —"CONSIDERATIONS ON REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT"—CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA —EXAMINATION OF SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON'S PHILOSOPHY—PARLIAMENTARY LIFE —REMAINDER OF MY LIFE |
NOTES: |
CONTENTS. |
|
CHAPTER I |
GENERAL REMARKS |
CHAPTER II |
WHAT UTILITARIANISM IS |
CHAPTER III |
OF THE ULTIMATE SANCTION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF UTILITY |
CHAPTER IV |
OF WHAT SORT OF PROOF THE PRINCIPLE OF UTILITY IS SUSCEPTIBLE |
CHAPTER V |
OF THE CONNEXION BETWEEN JUSTICE AND UTILITY |
PREFACE. | |
CONTENTS. | |
ESSAY I. | Of the Laws of Interchange between Nations; and the Distribution of the Gains of Commerce among the Countries of the Commercial World |
ESSAY II. | Of the Influence of Consumption upon Production |
ESSAY III. | On the Words Productive and Unproductive |
ESSAY IV. | On Profits, and Interest |
ESSAY V. | On the Definition of Political Economy; and on the Method of Investigation proper to it |
§ 1. | A definition at the commencement of a subject must be provisional | 1 |
2. | Is logic the art and science of reasoning? | 2 |
3. | Or the art and science of the pursuit of truth? | 3 |
4. | Logic is concerned with inferences, not with intuitive truths | 5 |
5. | Relation of logic to the other sciences | 8 |
6. | Its utility, how shown | 10 |
7. | Definition of logic stated and illustrated | 11 |
BOOK
I.
OF NAMES AND PROPOSITIONS. |
||
Chapter
I. Of the Necessity of commencing with an Analysis of
Language.
|
||
§ 1. | Theory of names, why a necessary part of logic | 17 |
2. | First step in the analysis of Propositions | 18 |
3. | Names must be studied before Things | 21 |
Chapter
II. Of Names.
|
||
§ 1. | Names are names of things, not of our ideas | 23 |
2. | Words which are not names, but parts of names | 24 |
3. | General and Singular names | 26 |
4. | Concrete and Abstract | 29 |
5. | Connotative and Non-connotative | 31 |
6. | Positive and Negative | 42 |
7. | Relative and Absolute | 44 |
8. | Univocal and Æquivocal | 47 |
[Pg xii]
Chapter
III. Of the Things denoted by Names.
|
||
§ 1. | Necessity of an enumeration of Nameable Things. The Categories of Aristotle | 49 |
2. | Ambiguity of the most general names | 51 |
3. | Feelings, or states of consciousness | 54 |
4. | Feelings must be distinguished from their physical antecedents. Perceptions, what | 56 |
5. | Volitions, and Actions, what | 58 |
6. | Substance and Attribute | 59 |
7. | Body | 61 |
8. | Mind | 67 |
9. | Qualities | 69 |
10. | Relations | 72 |
11. | Resemblance | 74 |
12. | Quantity | 78 |
13. | All attributes of bodies are grounded on states of consciousness | 79 |
14. | So also all attributes of mind | 80 |
15. | Recapitulation | 81 |
Chapter
IV. Of Propositions.
|
||
§ 1. | Nature and office of the copula | 85 |
2. | Affirmative and Negative propositions | 87 |
3. | Simple and Complex | 89 |
4. | Universal, Particular, and Singular | 93 |
Chapter
V. Of the Import of Propositions.
|
||
§ 1. | Doctrine that a proposition is the expression of a relation between two ideas | 96 |
2. | Doctrine that it is the expression of a relation between the meanings of two names | 99 |
3. | Doctrine that it consists in referring something to, or excluding something from, a class | 103 |
4. | What it really is | 107 |
5. | It asserts (or denies) a sequence, a coexistence, a simple existence, a causation | 110 |
6. | —or a resemblance | 112 |
7. | Propositions of which the terms are abstract | 115 |
[Pg xiii]
Chapter
VI. Of Propositions merely Verbal.
|
||
§ 1. | Essential and Accidental propositions | 119 |
2. | All essential propositions are identical propositions | 120 |
3. | Individuals have no essences | 124 |
4. | Real propositions, how distinguished from verbal | 126 |
5. | Two modes of representing the import of a Real proposition | 127 |
Chapter
VII. Of the Nature of Classification, and the Five
Predicables.
|
||
§ 1. | Classification, how connected with Naming | 129 |
2. | The Predicables, what | 131 |
3. | Genus and Species | 131 |
4. | Kinds have a real existence in nature | 134 |
5. | Differentia | 139 |
6. | Differentiæ for general purposes, and differentiæ for special or technical purposes | 141 |
7. | Proprium | 144 |
8. | Accidens | 146 |
Chapter
VIII. Of Definition.
|
||
§ 1. | A definition, what | 148 |
2. | Every name can be defined, whose meaning is susceptible of analysis | 150 |
3. | Complete, how distinguished from incomplete definitions | 152 |
4. | —and from descriptions | 154 |
5. | What are called definitions of Things, are definitions of Names with an implied assumption of the existence of Things corresponding to them | 157 |
6. | —even when such things do not in reality exist | 165 |
7. | Definitions, though of names only, must be grounded on knowledge of the corresponding Things | 167 |
[Pg xiv] |
BOOK
II.
OF REASONING. |
|
Chapter
I. Of Inference, or Reasoning, in general.
|
||
§ 1. | Retrospect of the preceding book | 175 |
2. | Inferences improperly so called | 177 |
3. | Inferences proper, distinguished into inductions and ratiocinations | 181 |
Chapter
II. Of Ratiocination, or Syllogism.
|
||
§ 1. | Analysis of the Syllogism | 184 |
2. | The dictum de omni not the foundation of reasoning, but a mere identical proposition | 191 |
3. | What is the really fundamental axiom of Ratiocination | 196 |
4. | The other form of the axiom | 199 |
Chapter
III. Of the Functions, and Logical Value, of the
Syllogism.
|
||
§ 1. | Is the syllogism a petitio principii? | 202 |
2. | Insufficiency of the common theory | 203 |
3. | All inference is from particulars to particulars | 205 |
4. | General propositions are a record of such inferences, and the rules of the syllogism are rules for the interpretation of the record | 214 |
5. | The syllogism not the type of reasoning, but a test of it | 218 |
6. | The true type, what | 222 |
7. | Relation between Induction and Deduction | 226 |
8. | Objections answered | 227 |
9. | Of Formal Logic, and its relation to the Logic of Truth | 231 |
Chapter
IV. Of Trains of Reasoning, and Deductive Sciences.
|
||
§ 1. | For what purpose trains of reasoning exist | 234 |
2. | A train of reasoning is a series of inductive inferences | 234 |
3. | —from particulars to particulars through marks of marks | 237 |
4. | Why there are deductive sciences | 240 |
5. | Why other sciences still remain experimental | 244 |
6. | Experimental sciences may become deductive by the progress of experiment | 246 |
7. | In what manner this usually takes place | 247 |
[Pg xv]
Chapter
V. Of Demonstration, and Necessary Truths.
|
||
§ 1. | The Theorems of geometry are necessary truths only in the sense of necessarily following from hypotheses | 251 |
2. | Those hypotheses are real facts with some of their circumstances exaggerated or omitted | 255 |
3. | Some of the first principles of geometry are axioms, and these are not hypothetical | 256 |
4. | —but are experimental truths | 258 |
5. | An objection answered | 261 |
6. | Dr. Whewell's opinions on axioms examined | 264 |
Chapter
VI. The same Subject continued.
|
||
§ 1. | All deductive sciences are inductive | 281 |
2. | The propositions of the science of number are not verbal, but generalizations from experience | 284 |
3. | In what sense hypothetical | 289 |
4. | The characteristic property of demonstrative science is to be hypothetical | 290 |
5. | Definition of demonstrative evidence | 292 |
Chapter
VII. Examination of some Opinions opposed to the
preceding doctrines.
|
||
§ 1. | Doctrine of the Universal Postulate | 294 |
2. | The test of inconceivability does not represent the aggregate of past experience | 296 |
3. | —nor is implied in every process of thought | 299 |
4. | Sir W. Hamilton's opinion on the Principles of Contradiction and Excluded Middle | 306 |
BOOK
III.
OF INDUCTION. |
||
Chapter
I. Preliminary Observations on Induction in general.
|
||
§ 1. | Importance of an Inductive Logic | 313 |
2. | The logic of science is also that of business and life | 314 |
Chapter
II. Of Inductions improperly so called.
|
||
§ 1. | Inductions distinguished from verbal transformations | 319 |
2. | —from inductions, falsely so called, in mathematics | 321 |
3. | —and from descriptions | 323 |
4. | Examination of Dr. Whewell's theory of Induction | 326 |
5. | Further illustration of the preceding remarks | 336 |
[Pg xvi]
Chapter
III. On the Ground of Induction.
|
||
§ 1. | Axiom of the uniformity of the course of nature | 341 |
2. | Not true in every sense. Induction per enumerationem simplicem | 346 |
3. | The question of Inductive Logic stated | 348 |
Chapter
IV. Of Laws of Nature.
|
||
§ 1. | The general regularity in nature is a tissue of partial regularities, called laws | 351 |
2. | Scientific induction must be grounded on previous spontaneous inductions | 355 |
3. | Are there any inductions fitted to be a test of all others? | 357 |
Chapter
V. Of the Law of Universal Causation.
|
||
§ 1. | The universal law of successive phenomena is the Law of Causation | 360 |
2. | —i.e. the law that every consequent has an invariable antecedent | 363 |
3. | The cause of a phenomenon is the assemblage of its conditions | 365 |
4. | The distinction of agent and patient illusory | 373 |
5. | The cause is not the invariable antecedent, but the unconditional invariable antecedent | 375 |
6. | Can a cause be simultaneous with its effect? | 380 |
7. | Idea of a Permanent Cause, or original natural agent | 383 |
8. | Uniformities of coexistence between effects of different permanent causes, are not laws | 386 |
9. | Doctrine that volition is an efficient cause, examined | 387 |
Chapter
VI. Of the Composition of Causes.
|
||
§ 1. | Two modes of the conjunct action of causes, the mechanical and the chemical | 405 |
2. | The composition of causes the general rule; the other case exceptional | 408 |
3. | Are effects proportional to their causes? | 412 |
Chapter
VII. Of Observation and Experiment.
|
||
§ 1. | The first step of inductive inquiry is a mental analysis of complex phenomena into their elements | 414 |
2. | The next is an actual separation of those elements | 416 |
3. | Advantages of experiment over observation | 417 |
4. | Advantages of observation over experiment | 420 |
[Pg xvii]
Chapter
VIII. Of the Four Methods of Experimental Inquiry.
|
||
§ 1. | Method of Agreement | 425 |
2. | Method of Difference | 428 |
3. | Mutual relation of these two methods | 429 |
4. | Joint Method of Agreement and Difference | 433 |
5. | Method of Residues | 436 |
6. | Method of Concomitant Variations | 437 |
7. | Limitations of this last method | 443 |
Chapter
IX. Miscellaneous Examples of the Four Methods.
|
||
§ 1. | Liebig's theory of metallic poisons | 449 |
2. | Theory of induced electricity | 453 |
3. | Dr. Wells' theory of dew | 457 |
4. | Dr. Brown-Séquard's theory of cadaveric rigidity | 465 |
5. | Examples of the Method of Residues | 471 |
6. | Dr. Whewell's objections to the Four Methods | 475 |
Chapter
X. Of Plurality of Causes; and of the Intermixture of
Effects.
|
||
§ 1. | One effect may have several causes | 482 |
2. | —which is the source of a characteristic imperfection of the Method of Agreement | 483 |
3. | Plurality of Causes, how ascertained | 487 |
4. | Concurrence of Causes which do not compound their effects | 489 |
5. | Difficulties of the investigation, when causes compound their effects | 494 |
6. | Three modes of investigating the laws of complex effects | 499 |
7. | The method of simple observation inapplicable | 500 |
8. | The purely experimental method inapplicable | 501 |
Chapter
XI. Of the Deductive Method.
|
||
§ 1. | First stage; ascertainment of the laws of the separate causes by direct induction | 507 |
2. | Second stage; ratiocination from the simple laws of the complex cases | 512 |
3. | Third stage; verification by specific experience | 514 |
[Pg xviii]
Chapter
XII. Of the Explanation of Laws of Nature.
|
||
§ 1. | Explanation defined | 518 |
2. | First mode of explanation, by resolving the law of a complex effect into the laws of the concurrent causes and the fact of their coexistence | 518 |
3. | Second mode; by the detection of an intermediate link in the sequence | 519 |
4. | Laws are always resolved into laws more general than themselves | 520 |
5. | Third mode; the subsumption of less general laws under a more general one | 524 |
6. | What the explanation of a law of nature amounts to | 526 |
Chapter
XIII. Miscellaneous Examples of the Explanation of
Laws of Nature.
|
||
§ 1. | The general theories of the sciences | 529 |
2. | Examples from chemical speculations | 531 |
3. | Example from Dr. Brown-Séquard's researches on the nervous system | 533 |
4. | Examples of following newly-discovered laws into their complex manifestations | 534 |
5. | Examples of empirical generalizations, afterwards confirmed and explained deductively | 536 |
6. | Example from mental science | 538 |
7. | Tendency of all the sciences to become deductive | 539 |
BOOK
III.
ON INDUCTION.—(Continued.) |
||
Chapter
XIV. Of the Limits to the Explanation of Laws of
Nature; and of Hypotheses.
|
||
§ 1. | Can all the sequences in nature be resolvable into one law? | 3 |
2. | Ultimate laws cannot be less numerous than the distinguishable feelings of our nature | 4 |
3. | In what sense ultimate facts can be explained | 7 |
4. | The proper use of scientific hypotheses | 8 |
5. | Their indispensableness | 16 |
6. | Legitimate, how distinguished from illegitimate hypotheses | 18 |
7. | Some inquiries apparently hypothetical are really inductive | 25 |
Chapter
XV. Of Progressive Effects; and of the Continued
Action of Causes.
|
||
§ 1. | How a progressive effect results from the simple continuance of the cause | 29 |
2. | —and from the progressiveness of the cause | 33 |
3. | Derivative laws generated from a single ultimate law | 36 |
Chapter
XVI. Of Empirical Laws.
|
||
§ 1. | Definition of an empirical law | 38 |
2. | Derivative laws commonly depend on collocations | 39 |
3. | The collocations of the permanent causes are not reducible to any law | 41 |
[Pg vi]4. | Hence empirical laws cannot be relied on beyond the limits of actual experience | 41 |
5. | Generalizations which rest only on the Method of Agreement can only be received as empirical laws | 43 |
6. | Signs from which an observed uniformity of sequence may be presumed to be resolvable | 44 |
7. | Two kinds of empirical laws | 47 |
Chapter
XVII. Of Chance, and its Elimination.
|
||
§ 1. | The proof of empirical laws depends on the theory of chance | 49 |
2. | Chance defined and characterized | 50 |
3. | The elimination of chance | 55 |
4. | Discovery of residual phenomena by eliminating chance | 57 |
5. | The doctrine of chances | 59 |
Chapter
XVIII. Of the Calculation of Chances.
|
||
§ 1. | Foundation of the doctrine of chances, as taught by mathematics | 61 |
2. | The doctrine tenable | 63 |
3. | On what foundation it really rests | 64 |
4. | Its ultimate dependence on causation | 68 |
5. | Theorem of the doctrine of chances which relates to the cause of a given event | 72 |
6. | How applicable to the elimination of chance | 74 |
Chapter
XIX. Of the Extension of Derivative Laws to Adjacent
Cases.
|
||
§ 1. | Derivative laws, when not casual, are almost always contingent on collocations | 78 |
2. | On what grounds they can be extended to cases beyond the bounds of actual experience | 80 |
3. | Those cases must be adjacent cases | 82 |
Chapter
XX. Of Analogy.
|
||
§ 1. | Various senses of the word analogy | 86 |
2. | Nature of analogical evidence | 87 |
3. | On what circumstances its value depends | 91 |
[Pg vii] |
Chapter
XXI. Of the Evidence of the Law of Universal
Causation.
|
|
§ 1. | The law of causality does not rest on an instinct | 95 |
2. | But on an induction by simple enumeration | 100 |
3. | In what cases such induction is allowable | 102 |
4. | The universal prevalence of the law of causality, on what grounds admissible | 105 |
Chapter
XXII. Of Uniformities of Coexistence not dependent on
Causation.
|
||
§ 1. | Uniformities of coexistence which result from laws of sequence | 110 |
2. | The properties of Kinds are uniformities of coexistence | 111 |
3. | Some are derivative, others ultimate | 113 |
4. | No universal axiom of coexistence | 114 |
5. | The evidence of uniformities of coexistence, how measured | 117 |
6. | When derivative, their evidence is that of empirical laws | 117 |
7. | So also when ultimate | 119 |
8. | The evidence stronger in proportion as the law is more general | 120 |
9. | Every distinct Kind must be examined | 121 |
Chapter
XXIII. Of Approximate Generalizations, and Probable
Evidence.
|
||
§ 1. | The inferences called probable, rest on approximate generalizations | 124 |
2. | Approximate generalizations less useful in science than in life | 124 |
3. | In what cases they may be resorted to | 126 |
4. | In what manner proved | 127 |
5. | With what precautions employed | 130 |
6. | The two modes of combining probabilities | 131 |
7. | How approximate generalizations may be converted into accurate generalizations equivalent to them | 136 |
[Pg viii] |
Chapter
XXIV. Of the Remaining Laws of Nature.
|
|
§ 1. | Propositions which assert mere existence | 139 |
2. | Resemblance, considered as a subject of science | 141 |
3. | The axioms and theorems of mathematics comprise the principal laws of resemblance | 143 |
4. | —and those of order in place, and rest on induction by simple enumeration | 145 |
5. | The propositions of arithmetic affirm the modes of formation of some given number | 146 |
6. | Those of algebra affirm the equivalence of different modes of formation of numbers generally | 151 |
7. | The propositions of geometry are laws of outward nature | 154 |
8. | Why geometry is almost entirely deductive | 156 |
9. | Function of mathematical truths in the other sciences, and limits of that function | 158 |
Chapter
XXV. Of the Grounds of Disbelief.
|
||
§ 1. | Improbability and impossibility | 161 |
2. | Examination of Hume's doctrine of miracles | 162 |
3. | The degrees of improbability correspond to differences in the nature of the generalization with which an assertion conflicts | 166 |
4. | A fact is not incredible because the chances are against it | 170 |
5. | Are coincidences less credible than other facts? | 172 |
6. | An opinion of Laplace examined | 175 |
BOOK
IV.
OF OPERATIONS SUBSIDIARY TO INDUCTION. |
||
Chapter
I. Of Observation and Description.
|
||
§ 1. | Observation, how far a subject of logic | 183 |
2. | A great part of what seems observation is really inference | 184 |
3. | The description of an observation affirms more than is contained in the observation | 187 |
4. | —namely an agreement among phenomena; and the comparison of phenomena to ascertain such agreements is a preliminary to induction | 190 |
[Pg ix] |
Chapter
II. Of Abstraction, or the Formation of Conceptions.
|
|
§ 1. | The comparison which is a preliminary to induction implies general conceptions | 193 |
2. | —but these need not be pre-existent | 194 |
3. | A general conception, originally the result of a comparison, becomes itself the type of comparison | 198 |
4. | What is meant by appropriate conceptions | 200 |
5. | —and by clear conceptions | 203 |
6. | Further illustration of the subject | 205 |
Chapter
III. Of Naming, as subsidiary to Induction.
|
||
§ 1. | The fundamental property of names as an instrument of thought | 209 |
2. | Names are not indispensable to induction | 210 |
3. | In what manner subservient to it | 211 |
4. | General names not a mere contrivance to economize the use of language | 213 |
Chapter
IV. Of the Requisites of a Philosophical Language, and
the Principles of Definition.
|
||
§ 1. | First requisite of philosophical language, a steady and determinate meaning for every general name | 215 |
2. | Names in common use have often a loose connotation | 215 |
3. | —which the logician should fix, with as little alteration as possible | 218 |
4. | Why definition is often a question not of words but of things | 220 |
5. | How the logician should deal with the transitive applications of words | 224 |
6. | Evil consequences of casting off any portion of the customary connotation of words | 229 |
[Pg x] |
Chapter
V. On the Natural History of the Variations in the
Meaning of Terms.
|
|
§ 1. | How circumstances originally accidental become incorporated into the meaning of words | 236 |
2. | —and sometimes become the whole meaning | 238 |
3. | Tendency of words to become generalized | 240 |
4. | —and to become specialized | 243 |
Chapter
VI. The Principles of a Philosophical Language further
considered.
|
||
§ 1. | Second requisite of philosophical language, a name for every important meaning | 248 |
2. | —viz. first, an accurate descriptive terminology | 248 |
3. | —secondly, a name for each of the more important results of scientific abstraction | 252 |
4. | —thirdly, a nomenclature, or system of the names of Kinds | 255 |
5. | Peculiar nature of the connotation of names which belong to a nomenclature | 257 |
6. | In what cases language may, and may not, be used mechanically | 259 |
Chapter
VII. Of Classification, as subsidiary to Induction.
|
||
§ 1. | Classification as here treated of, wherein different from the classification implied in naming | 266 |
2. | Theory of natural groups | 267 |
3. | Are natural groups given by type, or by definition? | 271 |
4. | Kinds are natural groups | 274 |
5. | How the names of Kinds should be constructed | 280 |
Chapter
VIII. Of Classification by Series.
|
||
§ 1. | Natural groups should be arranged in a natural series | 284 |
2. | The arrangement should follow the degrees of the main phenomenon | 285 |
3. | —which implies the assumption of a type-species | 287 |
[Pg xi]4. | How the divisions of the series should be determined | 288 |
5. | Zoology affords the completest type of scientific classification | 289 |
BOOK
V.
ON FALLACIES. |
||
Chapter
I. Of Fallacies in General.
|
||
§ 1. | Theory of fallacies a necessary part of logic | 295 |
2. | Casual mistakes are not fallacies | 297 |
3. | The moral sources of erroneous opinion, how related to the intellectual | 297 |
Chapter
II. Classification of Fallacies.
|
||
§ 1. | On what criteria a classification of fallacies should be grounded | 301 |
2. | The five classes of fallacies | 302 |
3. | The reference of a fallacy to one or another class is sometimes arbitrary | 305 |
Chapter
III. Fallacies of Simple Inspection, or à priori
Fallacies.
|
||
§ 1. | Character of this class of Fallacies | 309 |
2. | Natural prejudice of mistaking subjective laws for objective, exemplified in popular superstitions | 310 |
3. | Natural prejudices, that things which we think of together must exist together, and that what is inconceivable must be false | 314 |
4. | Natural prejudice, of ascribing objective existence to abstractions | 321 |
5. | Fallacy of the Sufficient Reason | 322 |
6. | Natural prejudice, that the differences in nature correspond to the distinctions in language | 325 |
7. | Prejudice, that a phenomenon cannot have more than one cause | 329 |
8. | Prejudice, that the conditions of a phenomenon must resemble the phenomenon | 332 |
[Pg xii] |
Chapter
IV. Fallacies of Observation.
|
|
§ 1. | Non-observation, and Mal-observation | 341 |
2. | Non-observation of instances, and non-observation of circumstances | 341 |
3. | Examples of the former | 342 |
4. | —and of the latter | 347 |
5. | Mal-observation characterized and exemplified | 352 |
Chapter
V. Fallacies of Generalization.
|
||
§ 1. | Character of the class | 356 |
2. | Certain kinds of generalization must always be groundless | 356 |
3. | Attempts to resolve phenomena radically different into the same | 357 |
4. | Fallacy of mistaking empirical for causal laws | 359 |
5. | Post hoc, ergo propter hoc; and the deductive fallacy corresponding to it | 364 |
6. | Fallacy of False Analogies | 366 |
7. | Function of metaphors in reasoning | 373 |
8. | How fallacies of generalization grow out of bad classification | 375 |
Chapter
VI. Fallacies of Ratiocination.
|
||
§ 1. | Introductory Remarks | 377 |
2. | Fallacies in the conversion and æquipollency of propositions | 377 |
3. | Fallacies in the syllogistic process | 379 |
4. | Fallacy of changing the premises | 379 |
Chapter
VII. Fallacies of Confusion.
|
||
§ 1. | Fallacy of Ambiguous Terms | 384 |
2. | Fallacy of Petitio Principii | 396 |
3. | Fallacy of Ignoratio Elenchi | 405 |
[Pg xiii] |
BOOK
VI.
ON THE LOGIC OF THE MORAL SCIENCES. |
|
Chapter
I. Introductory Remarks.
|
||
§ 1. | The backward state of the Moral Sciences can only be remedied by applying to them the methods of Physical Science, duly extended and generalized | 413 |
2. | How far this can be attempted in the present work | 415 |
Chapter
II. Of Liberty and Necessity.
|
||
§ 1. | Are human actions subject to the law of causality? | 417 |
2. | The doctrine commonly called Philosophical Necessity, in what sense true | 418 |
3. | Inappropriateness and pernicious effect of the term Necessity | 420 |
4. | A motive not always the anticipation of a pleasure or a pain | 424 |
Chapter
III. That there is, or may be, a Science of Human
Nature.
|
||
§ 1. | There may be sciences which are not exact sciences | 426 |
2. | To what scientific type the Science of Human Nature corresponds | 429 |
Chapter
IV. Of the Laws of Mind.
|
||
§ 1. | What is meant by Laws of Mind | 432 |
2. | Is there a science of Psychology? | 433 |
3. | The principal investigations of Psychology characterized | 435 |
4. | Relation of mental facts to physical conditions | 440 |
Chapter
V. Of Ethology, or the Science of the Formation of
Character.
|
||
§ 1. | The Empirical Laws of Human Nature | 445 |
2. | —are merely approximate generalizations. The universal laws are those of the formation of character | 447 |
[Pg xiv]3. | The laws of the formation of character cannot be ascertained by observation and experiment | 449 |
4. | —but must be studied deductively | 454 |
5. | The Principles of Ethology are the axiomata media of mental science | 455 |
6. | Ethology characterized | 459 |
Chapter
VI. General Considerations on the Social Science.
|
||
§ 1. | Are Social Phenomena a subject of Science? | 461 |
2. | Of what nature the Social Science must be | 463 |
Chapter
VII. Of the Chemical, or Experimental, Method in the
Social Science.
|
||
§ 1. | Characters of the mode of thinking which deduces political doctrines from specific experience | 466 |
2. | In the Social Science experiments are impossible | 468 |
3. | —the Method of Difference inapplicable | 469 |
4. | —and the Methods of Agreement, and of Concomitant Variations, inconclusive | 471 |
5. | The Method of Residues also inconclusive, and presupposes Deduction | 472 |
Chapter
VIII. Of the Geometrical, or Abstract Method.
|
||
§ 1. | Characters of this mode of thinking | 476 |
2. | Examples of the Geometrical Method | 478 |
3. | The interest-philosophy of the Bentham school | 479 |
Chapter
IX. Of the Physical, or Concrete Deductive Method.
|
||
§ 1. | The Direct and Inverse Deductive Methods | 486 |
2. | Difficulties of the Direct Deductive Method in the Social Science | 489 |
3. | To what extent the different branches of sociological speculation can be studied apart. Political Economy characterized | 492 |
4. | Political Ethology, or the science of national character | 497 |
5. | The Empirical Laws of the Social Science | 500 |
6. | The Verification of the Social Science | 502 |
[Pg xv] |
Chapter
X. Of the Inverse Deductive, or Historical Method.
|
|
§ 1. | Distinction between the general Science of Society, and special sociological inquiries | 506 |
2. | What is meant by a State of Society? | 506 |
3. | The Progressiveness of Man and Society | 508 |
4. | The laws of the succession of states of society can only be ascertained by the Inverse Deductive Method | 511 |
5. | Social Statics, or the science of the Coexistences of Social Phenomena | 513 |
6. | Social Dynamics, or the science of the Successions of Social Phenomena | 521 |
7. | Outlines of the Historical Method | 522 |
8. | Future prospects of Sociological Inquiry | 525 |
Chapter
XI. Additional Elucidations of the Science of History.
|
||
§ 1. | The subjection of historical facts to uniform laws is verified by statistics | 529 |
2. | —does not imply the insignificance of moral causes | 532 |
3. | —nor the inefficacy of the characters of individuals and of the acts of governments | 535 |
4. | The historical importance of eminent men and of the policy of governments illustrated | 540 |
Chapter
XII. Of the Logic of Practice, or Art; including
Morality and Policy.
|
||
§ 1. | Morality not a science, but an Art | 544 |
2. | Relation between rules of art and the theorems of the corresponding science | 544 |
3. | What is the proper function of rules of art? | 546 |
4. | Art cannot be Deductive | 548 |
5. | Every Art consists of truths of Science, arranged in the order suitable for some practical use | 549 |
6. | Teleology, or the Doctrine of Ends | 550 |
7. | Necessity of an ultimate standard, or first principle of Teleology | 552 |
8. | Conclusion | 554 |
Book I | Of Names And Propositions. |
Chapter I | Of The Necessity Of Commencing With An Analysis Of Language. |
Chapter II | Of Names. |
Chapter III | Of The Things Denoted By Names. |
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 | On 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. |
Chapter VII | Examination Of Some Opinions Opposed To The Preceding Doctrines. |
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 | On The Composition Of Causes. |
Chapter VII | On 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. |
Chapter XIII | Miscellaneous Examples Of The Explanation Of Laws Of Nature. |
Chapter XIV | Of The Limits To The Explanation Of Laws Of Nature; And Of Hypotheses. |
Chapter XV | Of Progressive Effects; And Of The Continued Action Of Causes. |
Chapter XVI | Of Empirical Laws. |
Chapter XVII | Of Chance And Its Elimination. |
Chapter XVIII | Of The Calculation Of Chances. |
Chapter XIX | Of The Extension Of Derivative Laws To Adjacent Cases. |
Chapter XX | Of Analogy. |
Chapter XXI | Of The Evidence Of The Law Of Universal Causation. |
Chapter XXII | Of Uniformities Of Co-Existence Not Dependent On Causation. |
Chapter XXIV | Of The Remaining Laws Of Nature. |
Chapter XXV | Of The Grounds Of Disbelief. |
Book IV | Of Operations Subsidiary To Induction. |
Chapter I | Of Observation And Description. |
Chapter II | Of Abstraction, Or The Formation Of Conceptions. |
Chapter III | Of Naming, As Subsidiary To Induction. |
Chapter IV | Of The Requisites Of A Philosophical Language, And The Principles Of Definition. |
Chapter V | On The Natural History Of The Variations In The Meaning Of Terms. |
Chapter VI | The Principles Of A Philosophical Language Further Considered. |
Chapter VII | Of Classification, As Subsidiary To Induction. |
Chapter VIII | Of Classification By Series. |
Book V | On Fallacies. |
Chapter I | Of Fallacies In General. |
Chapter II | Classification Of Fallacies. |
Chapter III | Fallacies Of Simple Inspection; Or A Priori Fallacies. |
Chapter IV | Fallacies Of Observation. |
Chapter V | Fallacies Of Generalization. |
Chapter VI | Fallacies Of Ratiocination. |
Chapter VII | Fallacies Of Confusion. |
Book VI | On The Logic Of The Moral Sciences. |
Chapter I | Introductory Remarks. |
Chapter II | Of Liberty And Necessity. |
Chapter III | That There Is, Or May Be, A Science Of Human Nature. |
Chapter IV | Of The Laws Of Mind. |
Chapter V | Of Ethology, Or The Science Of The Formation Of Character. |
Chapter VI | General Considerations On The Social Science. |
Chapter VII | Of The Chemical, Or Experimental, Method In The Social Science. |
Chapter VIII | Of The Geometrical, Or Abstract, Method. |
Chapter IX | Of The Physical, Or Concrete Deductive, Method. |
Chapter X | Of The Inverse Deductive, Or Historical, Method. |
Chapter XI | Additional Elucidations Of The Science Of History. |
Chapter XII | Of The Logic Of Practice, Or Art; Including Morality And Policy. |
Footnotes |
|
PAGE | ||||||||||||||||||
INTRODUCTION | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER I.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Sensation | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 1. Smell | ||||||||||||||||||
2. Hearing | 16 | ||||||||||||||||||
3. Sight | 21 | ||||||||||||||||||
4. Taste | 25 | ||||||||||||||||||
5. Touch | 28 | ||||||||||||||||||
6. Sensations of Disorganization, or of the Approach to Disorganization, in any part of the Body | 37 | ||||||||||||||||||
7. Muscular Sensations, or those Feelings which accompany the Action of the Muscles | 40 | ||||||||||||||||||
8. Sensations in the Alimentary Canal | 45 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER II.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Ideas | 51 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER III.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Association of Ideas | 70 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER IV.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Naming | 127 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 1. Nouns Substantive | ||||||||||||||||||
2. Nouns Adjective | 134 | ||||||||||||||||||
3. Verbs | 151 | ||||||||||||||||||
4. Predication | 159 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 5. Pronouns | ||||||||||||||||||
6. Adverbs | 199 | ||||||||||||||||||
7. Prepositions | 201 | ||||||||||||||||||
8. Conjunctions | 212 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER V.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Consciousness | 223 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER VI.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Conception | 233 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER VII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Imagination | 238 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Classification | 247 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER IX.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Abstraction | 294 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER X.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Memory | 318 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XI.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Belief | 341 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Ratiocination | 424 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XIII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Evidence | 428 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
APPENDIX | 440 |
CHAPTER XIV.
|
PAGE | ||||||||||||||||||
Some Names which require a particular Explanation | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 1. Names of Names | 3 | |||||||||||||||||
2. Relative Terms | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
Abstract Relative Terms | 72 | |||||||||||||||||
3. Numbers | 89 | ||||||||||||||||||
4. Privative Terms | 99 | ||||||||||||||||||
5. Time | 116 | ||||||||||||||||||
6. Motion | 142 | ||||||||||||||||||
7. Identity | 164 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XV.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Reflection | 176 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XVI.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Distinction between the Intellectual and Active Powers of the Human Mind | 181 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XVII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Pleasurable and Painful Sensations | 184 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XVIII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Causes of the Pleasurable and Painful Sensations | 187 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XIX.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Ideas of the Pleasurable and Painful Sensations, and of the Causes of them | 189 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XX.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Pleasurable and Painful Sensations, contemplated as passed, or future | 196 | ||||||||||||||||||
volume 2 vi
|
|||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XXI.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Causes of Pleasurable and Painful Sensations, contemplated as passed, or future | 201 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 1. The immediate Causes of Pleasurable and Painful Sensations, contemplated as passed, or as future | 201 | |||||||||||||||||
2. The Remote Causes of Pleasurable and Painful Sensations contemplated as passed, or future | 206 | ||||||||||||||||||
SUB-SECT. | 1. Wealth, Power, and Dignity, and their Contraries, contemplated as Causes of our Pleasures and Pains | 207 | |||||||||||||||||
2. Our Fellow-Creatures contemplated as Causes of our Pleasures and Pains | 214 | ||||||||||||||||||
1.—Friendship | 216 | ||||||||||||||||||
2.—Kindness | 216 | ||||||||||||||||||
3.—Family | 218 | ||||||||||||||||||
4.—Country | 226 | ||||||||||||||||||
5.—Party; Class | 227 | ||||||||||||||||||
6.—Mankind | 229 | ||||||||||||||||||
3. The Objects called Sublime and Beautiful, and their Contraries, contemplated as Causes of our Pleasures and Pains | 230 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XXII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Motives | 256 | ||||||||||||||||||
SECTION | 1. Pleasurable or Painful States, contemplated as the Consequents of our own Acts | 256 | |||||||||||||||||
2. Causes of our Pleasurable and Painful States, contemplated as the Consequents of our own Acts | 265 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XXIII.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Acts of our Fellow-creatures, which are Causes of our Pains and Pleasures, contemplated as Consequents of our own Acts | 280 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XXIV.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The Will | 327 | ||||||||||||||||||
CHAPTER XXV.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Intention | 396 |
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