- A
System of Logic,
Ratiocinative and
Inductive is an 1843 book by
English philosopher John
Stuart Mill. In this work, he
formulated the five principles...
-
First Figure only Pure
Ratiocinations are possible, in the
remaining Figures only
mixed Ratiocinations are possible. A
ratiocination is
always in the first...
- "reasonable". Some philosophers,
Thomas Hobbes for example, also used the word
ratiocination as a
synonym for "reasoning". The
proposal that
reason gives humanity...
- to
arrive at
conclusions by way of
unchecked regressive syllogistic ratiocination. The
three categories of relation,
pursued without regard to the limits...
- 179–197, ISBN 978-0-253-35235-4.
Harrowitz discusses Poe's "tales of
ratiocination" in the
light of
Charles Sanders Peirce's
logic of
making good guesses...
- S2CID 145777437. Mill, John
Stuart (February 2011). A
System of Logic,
Ratiocinative and Inductive.
classic Reprint.
Forgotten Books. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-4400-9082-0...
-
shipwreck and a whirlpool. It has been
grouped with Poe's
tales of
ratiocination and also
labeled an
early form of
science fiction.
Inspired by the Moskstraumen...
-
suspects are ****embled in one room to
await the
results of the detective's
ratiocinations) are
supposed to
evoke nostalgia. They do not—and the format's stasis...
-
finding the task interesting." The
study Cognitive Dissonance:
Private Ratiocination or
Public Spectacle? (Tedeschi, Schlenker, etc. 1971)
reported that...
-
modern detective story; Poe
referred to it as one of his "tales of
ratiocination". C.
Auguste Dupin is a man in
Paris who
solves the
mystery of the brutal...