Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 27British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 77
... inference and yet , because the inference is made so quickly that he does not notice it or fails to analyse it , may mistakenly regard it as a case of intuition . But we cannot deal with all ' intuition ' in this way . It cannot all be ...
... inference and yet , because the inference is made so quickly that he does not notice it or fails to analyse it , may mistakenly regard it as a case of intuition . But we cannot deal with all ' intuition ' in this way . It cannot all be ...
Page 87
... inferences will reveal them . ( The degree in which a single successful inference enhances the proba- bility of its premiss may of course be extremely small . ) The inference backwards from conclusions to premiss thus again depends on ...
... inferences will reveal them . ( The degree in which a single successful inference enhances the proba- bility of its premiss may of course be extremely small . ) The inference backwards from conclusions to premiss thus again depends on ...
Page 97
... inference . But this raises another question . As we have discovered , an important class of propositions which we must admit that we see intuitively to be true are propositions asserting the implications on which inference depends ...
... inference . But this raises another question . As we have discovered , an important class of propositions which we must admit that we see intuitively to be true are propositions asserting the implications on which inference depends ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By J H Clapham | 19 |
TSARDOM AND IMPERIALISM IN THE FAR EAST and Middle East | 25 |
REASON AND INTUITION Philosophical Lecture By A C Ewing | 67 |
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