70

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G70

past experience under sufficiently similar conditions. The
third theory (See Bk. III, chap. iii, §3,) is that nature as a whole is
not absolutely uniform, variety being a far more prominent characteristic
of it; and that such uniformity as there is, is "a mere tissue
of partial regularities," each consisting in the fact that
certain some classes of objects show a greater, and some a
less, tendency, to be as regards certain classes of characters, of
to be, or to
tendency to a resemblance of all their members in
respect to certain lines of characters; and that whoever knows this

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