[36] C. S. Peirce’s notation for the relation “converse of P.”
[37] Russell, Md., N. S., vol. xiv., October 1905, p. 482.
[38] Russell, International Monthly, vol. iv., 1901, pp. 85-6; cf. M., vol. xxii., 1912, p. 153. [This essay is reprinted in Mysticism and Logic, London and New York, 1918, pp. 74-96.—Ed.]
CHAPTER XI
CRITICISM
Those people who think that it is more godlike to seem to turn water into wine than to seem to turn wine into water surprise me. I cannot imagine an intolerable critic. It seems to me that, if A resents B’s criticism in trying to put his (A’s) discovery in the right or wrong place, A acts as if he thought he had some private property in truth. The White Queen seems to have shared the popular misconception as to the nature of criticism.[39]
[39] See [Appendix J].