[258] Hist. Ind. Sc. ii. 489, b. x. c. i.

[259] ii. p. 561.

[260] i. 50.

[261] i. 41.

[262] ii. 433.

[263] Phil. Pos. ii. 392-398.

[264] [A System of Logic, Ratiocinative and Inductive, being a connected view of the Principles of Evidence, and of the Methods of Scientific Investigation. By John Stuart Mill.]

[265] These Remarks were published in 1849, under the title Of Induction, with especial reference to Mr. J. S. Mill's System of Logic.

[266] My references are throughout (except when otherwise expressed) to the volume and the page of Mr. Mill's first edition of his Logic.

[267] On this subject see an Essay On the Transformation of Hypotheses, given in the Appendix.