[39] B. 179, M. 109. Cf. the whole passage B. 176-81, M. 107-10 (part quoted pp. 249-51), and p. 251.

[40] Cf. Locke and Hume.

[41] Cf. Caird, i. 394, where Dr. Caird speaks of 'the distinction of the activity of thought from the matter which it combines or recognizes as combined in the idea of an object'. (The italics are mine.) The context seems to indicate that the phrase is meant to express the truth, and not merely Kant's view.

[42] Cf. the account of judgement in Mr. Bradley's Logic.

[43] Cf. the account of inference in Mr. Bradley's Logic.

[44] Cf. Bradley, Logic, pp. 370 and 506.

[45] Cf. p. 124.


CHAPTER X