Under these several divisions, then, we shall meet once more with the special problems of philosophy, but this time they will be ranged in an order that is determined by some central doctrine. They will appear as parts not of the general problem of philosophy, but of some definite system of philosophy.
FOOTNOTES:
[182:2] The Socratic distinction between the logical and the psychological treatment of belief finds its best expression in Plato's Gorgias, especially, 454, 455. Cf. also § [29].
[182:3] Thus, e. g. Hegel. See § [179]. Cf. also §§ [199], [200].
[184:6] The reader will find a good illustration of eristic in Plato's Euthydemus, 275.
[187:7] The reader can find these rules, and the detail of the traditional formal logic, in any elementary text-book, such as, e. g., Jevons: Elements of Logic.