MS 468-471 (1903) - Lowell Lecture V

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MS_468-471

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Beta Part.

There is a point in a dot

If in any dot there is a point A and a point B, these are identical.

No point is in two dots

Taking any two indifiduals A and B and any relation R either there is a point of the line that is not R to A and is not R to B of there is a point of the line that is R to A and R to B

If there is a point of the line that is R to A and a point of the line that is R to B

Last edit about 6 years ago by gnox
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If there is a line of identity there are two individual lines of identity such that every point of the line is either in the one or in the other.

Last edit about 6 years ago by gnox
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The question is whether this is not deducible from the last

Every line of identity is a graph

It is always permitted to scribe a line of identity on the sheet of assertion with its extremities attached to blanks

If a dot is on the sheet of assertion it is permissible to attach to it a line of identity with the other extremity at a blank

Last edit about 6 years ago by gnox
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At what ever point on a line of identity there is a dot

Last edit about 6 years ago by gnox
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If a line of identity is scribable on the sheet of assertion, it is permitted to insert a point of ter-identity upon any point of it

Last edit about 6 years ago by gnox
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