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Logic

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Excerpt from Logic

But this state of things could not last. Sir W. Hamilton, the champion of conceptualism, put forth in his Lectures on Logic a theory of intellectual apprehension quite inconsistent with the traditional doctrine which still lingered in the meagre and obscure phraseology of Dean Aldrich. Sir W. Hamilton's disciple, Dean Manse], who.

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518 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 2007

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About the author

Richard F. Clarke

53 books1 follower
Richard Frederick Clarke (1839-1900)

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Ioseph Bonifacius (Ioannes).
22 reviews20 followers
April 5, 2019
A quote from the book:

“Since then, the Kantian principle of antinomies which underlies the Logic of Mansel and Hamilton has boldly come to the front in England under the shadow of the great name of Hegel, and English logicians have either ranged themselves under the banner of one or other of these new schools, or else have sought to cover the glaring inconsistencies of some one of them with patches borrowed from the others, until the modern student has a bewildering choice among a series of guides, each of whom follows a path of his own, leading in the end to obscurity and confusion and self- contradiction, but who are all united in this, that they discard and misrepresent the traditional teaching of Aristotle and of the mediaeval logicians.”

Their philosophy is confusing and contradicts itself, and as shown by many they make caricatures of what Aristotle and St. Thomas actually said. Unfortunately it is because of these clowns that many think philosophy which is the supreme science to be more or less useless. Truth does not change even if most people are not defending it. The rule of the modern “philosophers” is non serviem(I will not serve).

And here is the book in english: https://archive.org/details/cu3192403...
Profile Image for Ilya Kozlov.
40 reviews5 followers
March 8, 2011
i need to learn how correctly use my reason, before using it, without it i can not be "reasonably" happy.....first book i stonehedge college series....introduction to scholastic(traditional catholic ) type of thinking...not bad...i wanna be happy
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