Bibliographic Information

Pure logic and other minor works

W. Stanley Jevons

(Nineteenth-century British philosophy, 2nd ser.)

Thoemmes , Kinokuniya, c1991

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: London : Macmillan, 1890

Edited by Robert Adamson and Harriet A. Jevons

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This collection of Jevons' papers falls naturally into two groups. There are papers developing Jevons' positive conception of logic as a purely abstract, formal discipline; and there is a group of papers from the "Contemporary Review", written in criticism of Mill, in which Jevons reveals himself as one of the intellectual ancestors of the computer revolution. Logic, Jevons insists, involves only the form of thought and not the content; it is a matter of mechanical rules capable, in principle, of being followed by a machine. The second group, published under the general heading "J.S. Mill's Philosophy Tested", consists of articles on geometrical reasoning, resemblance, experimental methods and utilitarianism. According to Jevons, Mill's mind was "essentially illogical" and his famous "Logic" is a mere jumble of logic, epistemology, and psychology, utterly lacking in the rigour and formal elegance that characterize pure logic. It was Jevons' conception of logic, needless to say, and not Mill's that has become the orthodoxy of our own age.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA12240978
  • ISBN
    • 1855060965
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Bristol,Tokyo
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxiii, 299 p., [4] leaves of plates
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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