
LOGIC - DEDUCTIVE AND INDUCTIVE
LOGIC - DEDUCTIVE AND INDUCTIVE - BY - CARVETH READ, M.A.
PREFACE
LOGIC
CHAPTER I - INTRODUCTORY
CHAPTER II - GENERAL ANALYSIS OF PROPOSITIONS
CHAPTER III - OF TERMS AND THEIR DENOTATION
CHAPTER IV - THE CONNOTATION OF TERMS
CHAPTER V - THE CLASSIFICATION OF PROPOSITIONS
CHAPTER VI - CONDITIONS OF IMMEDIATE INFERENCE
This volume offers a clear, systematic introduction to the art of reasoning, distinguishing the ways we prove statements that describe the world around us. It begins by separating quantitative claims—those handled by mathematics—from qualitative ones that appear in everyday conversation, literature, politics, and the natural sciences. Using familiar examples such as “salt dissolves in water” or “ice feels cold,” the author shows how logical tools help us judge truth, falsity, or doubt.
Building on the traditions of Mill, Venn and Keynes, the text weaves together classical syllogisms, the laws of contradiction and causation, and a human‑centered focus on meaning. Revisions and added chapters make the material accessible to modern readers while retaining rigorous analysis. Listeners will come away with a solid grasp of deductive and inductive methods, ready to apply them to both scholarly inquiry and everyday argument.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (758K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2006-05-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1848–1931
A British philosopher and logician, he wrote clear, influential books on logic while also ranging into ethics, psychology, and the origins of religion and superstition. His work helped bring scientific habits of thought into philosophy for a wide general readership.
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