| John Venn - 1881 - 494 páginas
...non-connotative names is wholly erroneous and unfounded," and that "singular, proper, or socalled nou-counotative terms, are more full of connotation or meaning in...others, instead of being devoid of such meaning." (Pure Logic, p. 6.) It is really impossible to carry out such a view as this; 'particular propositions,'... | |
| John Venn - 1881 - 578 páginas
...unfounded," and that "singular, proper, or socalled non-connotative terms, are more full of connotation cr meaning in intent or quality than others, instead of being 'devoid of such meaning." (Pure Logic, p. 6.) It is really impossible to carry out such a view as this; 'particular propositions,'... | |
| William Stanley Jevons - 1890 - 346 páginas
...If there is any distinction to be drawn, it is that singular, proper, or so-called non-connotative terms, are more full of connotation or meaning in...provided that the same term have the same meaning througlwut any one piece of reasoning. Thus, instead of the nouns and adjectives, to each of which... | |
| I. Grattan-Guinness - 2000 - 716 páginas
...much better written as A = AB' (art. 144). However, this principle seems to infringe his 'Condition' that 'the same term have the same meaning throughout any one piece of reasoning' (art. 14). (Boole had required his class v to satisfy normal properties (1854a, 96), but he used more... | |
| John Venn - 2006 - 584 páginas
...non-connotative names is wholly erroneous and unfounded," and that "singular, proper, or socalled non-connotative terms, are more full of connotation or meaning in...others, instead of being devoid of such meaning." (Pure Logic, p. 6.) It is really impossible to carry out such a view as this ; ' particular propositions,'... | |
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