MS 611-15

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MS 611-15

Pages

60
Complete

60

1908 Nov 2 Logic 11

External percepts, i.e., sights, sounds, pressures, warm or hot objects and cool or cold objects, smooth and rough ones, stings, smarts, shivers and thrills, aches of various kinds, shocks in some variety, tastes, smells

Last edit about 8 years ago by jeffdown1
61
Complete

61

1908 Nov 2 Logic 11

External percepts, such as sights, sounds, pressures, rubs smooth, rough, and shivery, cramps, thrills, stings and cuts, smarts, burns, hot and warm objects, cool and cold objects, aches in great variety, tastes, smells, muscular sensations, jars, senses of intestinal motions; emotional feelings; recollections; fancied images; the double sense of Brute effort and resistance (in which, the more nearly pure it is, the more completely is the purpose of the exertion forgotten. For example, one may be so occupied in pushing with all his might against a door that he quite loses his desire to have it open, though this was the original motive of his pushing. I shall call any action 'Brutal' of which no reason is an ingredient. To resume the catalogue,) the sense of compulsion (and that in one's

Last edit about 8 years ago by gnox
62
Complete

62

1908 Nov 4 Logic 12

life by which he is compelled to acknowledged this or that I shall term his 'Experience,') the sense of temporal succession (by which, for example, if one has seen a man turn completely round, so as to face at last the same way as at first, one knows whether he turned to the right or to the left, which sense perhaps consists in recollecting what it was that one previously recollected;) the immediate sense of logical antecedence and consequence (which differs from the immediate sense of temporal antecedence and succedence in that while this latter is the immediate perception that a person who remembers the state of things A may thereby remember the state of things, B, which is thus constituted as subsequent to A, i.e., it may in A be remembered, the former is the immediate

Last edit about 8 years ago by jeffdown1
63
Complete

63

1908 Nov 4 Logic 13

perception that whoever recognizes in any way that the description A is applicable to anything may thereby be able to recognize that the description B is applicable to the same, whence we say that what B signifies "logically follows," or "is consequent upon" A. If B in either way follows A, but is not the same as A, then A cannot reciprocally follow B;)

Last edit about 8 years ago by jeffdown1
64
Complete

64

1908 Nov 7 Logic 15

(?? X)

different eruptions that it became one of the things I was best acquainted with. Yet I after all I knew it exclusively through signs. That is to say, it was only so that in gazing on the stupendous cone from Taormina on the north or from Catania on the south I that is was Etna, especially as the dwellers upon it call it by another half-Arabic name, 'Mongibello.'

Last edit almost 8 years ago by jeffdown1
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