213. Distinction between resembling feelings and idea of resemblance.
214. Substances = collections of ideas.
215. How can ideas ‘in flux’ be collected?
216. Are there general ideas? Berkeley said, ‘yes and no’.
217. Hume ‘no’ simply. How he accounts for the appearance of there being such.
219. His account implies that ‘ideas’ are conceptions, not feelings.
220. He virtually yields the point in regard to the predicate of propositions.
221. As to the subject, he equivocates between singleness of feeling and individuality of conception.
222. Result is a theory which admits predication, but only as singular.
223. All propositions restricted in same way as Locke’s propositions about real existence.