LECTURE IV TYPES OF JUDGMENT, AND THE GENERAL CONDITIONS INVOLVED IN ASSERTION

1. Correspondence between Types of Judgment and Nature of Objects as Knowledge 61 a. Impersonal Judgment 61 b. Perceptive Judgment 62 c. Proper Names in Judgment 64 d. Abstract Judgment 65

2. The General Definition of Judgment 66
i. What is implied in claiming Truth 67
ii. By what means the claim is made 69
iii. The kind of Ideas which can claim Truth 74
a. Idea as Psychical Presentation 74
b. Idea as Identical Reference 74

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