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jasirs94 at Nov 20, 2016 03:46 AM

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does not conclude apodictically considerably more difficult in those cases. Moreover, this theory does correctly state a part of the argument for very many inductive conclusions. But this part of the argument is not inductive but deductive. For these special uniformities, (such, for example, as that every chemical element has the same combining weight, no matter from what mineral or from what part of the globe it has come,) have only become known by induction, often only by elaborate investigations, and are not logical principles; so that they need to be stated as premisses when the argument is to be set forth in full. The special uniformities, when they become known, enable us to dispense with

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