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An examination of Sir William Hamilton's philosophy, and of the principal philosophical questions discussed in his writings / by John Stuart Mill. - 6th ed. - London : Longmans, Green, and Co., 1889. - XVI, 650 p.
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I. Introductory remarks
CHAPTER II. The relativity of human knowledge
CHAPTER III. The doctrine of the relativity of human knowledge, as held by Sir William Hamilton
CHAPTER IV. In what respect Sir William Hamilton really differs from the philosophers of the absolute
CHAPTER V. What is rejected as knowledge by Sir William Hamilton, brought back under the name of belief
CHAPTER VI. The philosophy of the conditioned
CHAPTER VII. The philosophy of the conditioned as applied by Mr. Mansel to the limits of religious thought
CHAPTER VIII. Of consciousness, as understood by Sir William Hamilton
CHAPTER IX. Of the interpretation of consciousness
CHAPTER X. Sir William Hamilton's view of the different theories respecting the belief in an external world
CHAPTER XI. The psychological theory of the belief in an external world
CHAPTER XII. The psychological theory of the belief in matter, how far applicable to mind
CHAPTER XIII. The psychological theory of the primary qualities of matter
CHAPTER XIV. How Sir William Hamilton and Mr. Mansel dispose of the law of inseparable association
CHAPTER V. Sir William Hamilton's doctrine of unconscious mental modifications
CHAPTER XVI. Sir William Hamilton's theory of causation
CHAPTER XVII. The doctrine of concepts, or general notions
CHAPTER XVIII. Of judgment
CHAPTER XIX. Of reasoning
CHAPTER XX. On Sir William Hamilton's conception of logic as a science, is logic the science of the laws, or forms, of thought?
CHAPTER XXI. The fundamental laws of thought according to Sir William Hamilton
CHAPTER XXII. Of Sir William Hamilton's supposed improvements in formal logic
CHAPTER XXIII. Of some minor peculiarities of doctrine in Sir William Hamilton's view of formal logic
CHAPTER XXIV. Of some natural prejudices countenanced by Sir William Hamilton, and some fallacies which he considers insoluble
CHAPTER XXV. Sir William Hamilton's theory of pleasure and pain
CHAPTER XXVI. On the freedom of the will
CHAPTER XXVII. Sir William Hamilton's opinions on the study of mathematics
CHAPTER XXVIII. Concluding remarks