95

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G95

from the first merely in not allowing, as essential to induction, that it should have any of such force as it might derive from employing the uniformity of experience as a premiss. Now this point of difference cannot confer upon induction as explained by the second theory any validity that it would not have if it were explicable by the first theory.

The Third theory presents two decided advantages. For it may remove entirely the vagueness of the general principle of uniformity; and in some cases makes the special uniformity predicate a probability, so as to render the refutation of the theory on the ground that induction

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