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Logic 144

will stand long but those which are true.
But the discussion of the strength of the argument belongs to Critical Logic and not to Speculative Grammar.
After the through and careful discussion of all the above matters involving many nice questions including the one concerning which logicians are today disputing the one concerning which logicians are today disputing more than any other many volumes having been devoted to it I mean that of the nature of the proposition and after every opinion has recieved its respectful hearing Seculative Grammar will come at last to its main problem that of Clearness than which none in logic is more practically vital.
I treated this subject in 1877 and enunciated a maxim the acceptance of which constitutes the position called Pragmatism a question which has of late years largely occupied philosophers.
My opinion remains substantially the same now as then; but all those

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