LECTURE V THE PROPOSITION AND THE NAME
1. Judgment translated into Language 80
2. Proposition and Sentence 82
3. Difference between Proposition and Judgment 82
4. “Parts of Speech” 85
5. Denotation and Connotation 88
6. Have Proper Names Connotation? 91
7. Inverse Ratio of Connotation and Denotation 94
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LECTURE VI PARTS OF THE JUDGMENT, AND ITS UNITY
1. Parts of the Judgment 98
2. Copula 99
3. Are Subject and Predicate necessary? 100
4. Two Ideas or Things 101
a. Two Ideas 102
i. Mental Transition 102
ii. Absence of Assertion 103
b. Two Things 104
5. Distinction between Subject and Predicate 107
LECTURE VII THE CATEGORICAL AND THE HYPOTHETICAL JUDGMENTS
1. Some Criticisms on the ordinary scheme of
Judgment 112
a. Why we need a Scheme 112
b. The Common Scheme 113
2. Which Judgments are Categorical? 116
(1) The “Particular” Judgment 116
a. Natural Meaning 116
b. Limited Meaning 117
(2) “Singular” Judgment 118
(3) “Universal” Judgment 119
(4) “Hypothetical” Judgment 121
(5) “Disjunctive” Judgment 123