Page:  of 461
 
6. Body [§7] 42
7. Mind [§8] 48
8. Qualities [§9] 49
9. Relations [§10] 52
10. Resemblance [§11] 55
11. Quantity [§12] 58
12. All attributes of bodies are grounded on states of
consciousness [§13]
59
13. So also all attributes of mind [§14] 60
14. Recapitulation [§15] 61
IV. OF THE IMPORT OF PROPOSITIONS [CH. V]
1. Doctrine that a proposition is the expression of a
relation between two ideas
64
2.-- that it consists in referring something to, or
excluding something from, a class [§3, abridged]
67
3. What it really is [§4] 71
4. It asserts (or denies) a sequence, a co-existence, a
simple existence, a causation [§5, abridged]
73
5.-- or a resemblance [§6, abridged] 76
6. Propositions of which the terms are abstract [§7] 78
V. OF PROPOSITIONS MERELY VERBAL [CH. VI]
1. All essential propositions are identical propositions
[§2]
82
2. Individuals have no essences [§3] 86
3. Real propositions, how distinguished from verbal
[§4]
87
4. Two modes of representing the import of a real
proposition [§5]
88
VI. OF THE NATURE OF CLASSIFICATION AND THE FIVE
PREDICABLES [CH. VII]
1. Classification, how connected with naming 90
2. Kinds have a real existence in nature [§4, abridged] 91
VII. OF DEFINITION [CH. VIII]
1. A definition, what [abridged] 96
2. Every name can be defined whose meaning is sus-
ceptible of analysis
97
3. How distinguished from descriptions [§4, abridged] 100

-vi-

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Publication Information: Book Title: John Stuart Mill's Philosophy of Scientific Method. Contributors: Ernest Nagel - editor, John Stuart Mill - author. Publisher: Hafner Press. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1950. Page Number: vi.
    
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