

#13982
Mentioned in 2 episodes
A System of Logic
Book • 1843
Published in 1843, 'A System of Logic' is John Stuart Mill's comprehensive work on logic and scientific methodology.
The book is divided into six main sections, covering topics such as the nature of names and propositions, inference and reasoning, induction, subsidiary operations to induction, fallacies, and the logic of the moral sciences.
Mill's work is notable for its rigorous explanation of inductive reasoning and its integration of empiricism within a broader theory of human knowledge.
The book had a significant impact on the development of modern logic and the empirical sciences, and it remains essential reading for understanding Mill's philosophical thought and its influence on subsequent intellectual traditions.
The book is divided into six main sections, covering topics such as the nature of names and propositions, inference and reasoning, induction, subsidiary operations to induction, fallacies, and the logic of the moral sciences.
Mill's work is notable for its rigorous explanation of inductive reasoning and its integration of empiricism within a broader theory of human knowledge.
The book had a significant impact on the development of modern logic and the empirical sciences, and it remains essential reading for understanding Mill's philosophical thought and its influence on subsequent intellectual traditions.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 2 episodes
Mentioned by Daniël Lakens when discussing the relationship between Bacon's work and Popper's philosophy.

27 snips
Episode 47: Inductio et Deductio