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paper, and I am inclined to think that Speculative Grammar, the name given by Duns Scotus to such an inquiry, is as good a designation as can be found for this preliminary inquiry into the nature knowledge. There will be no psychology in it; but the logician's analysis, if properly conducted, will be found of essential aid to the psychological epistemologist. See 45A
8th, If you turn over the leaves of a few treatises on logic, the first you chance to come across, you will not have to look far, especially if the books are in English, before you find the ordinary usages of language appeealed to in sup port of logical doctrines. Some of the most recent books are quite expanded with this type of arguments It has been deliberately laid down as the principal basis of logical science.
Those to whom this seems a very efficient method