Preface Chapter 1. Logic, what Chapter 2. Logic--its Characteristics--viz. 1. its End. 2. Field of Exercise. 3.
Subjects. 4. Operations. 5. Faculties. 6. Instruments. 7.
Functions. 8. Uses Chapter 3. III. Operations to the performance of which Logic is capable of affording direction and assistance Chapter 4. IV. Faculties; V. Instrument; VI.
Uses; VII. Functions Chapter 5. Mental Operations and Faculties--Methodization--its Uses--Purposes and Subjects to which it is applicable. Advantageous effects producible by means of it Chapter 6. Of Methodization, or arrangement Chapter 7. Of Division Chapter 8. Of Exposition by Paraphrasis with its subsidiary operations, viz. Phraseoplerosis and Archetypation Chapter 9.
Of Ontology: under which head are brought to view such objects as are designated by the most capacious and comprehensive appellations which the stock of Language affords Chapter 10. Of Art in general--Operations performable in relation to it Chapter 11. Of the art of Invention Chapter 12. Of Discourse or Language in general--Operations which, in its character of an art, are performable in relation to it Chapter 13. Of Improvement, considered as applicable to Language Chapter 14. Of the Improvement of Language in respect of Copiousness Chapter 15. Of Clearness in discourse--where the seat of the unclearness, actual or apprehended, is considered as being in the words taken singly:--and hence, of exposition Chapter 16. Of the Qualities desirable in style: i.
e. in language considered as employed by this or that individual Chapter 17. Rules for the avoidance of the imperfections opposite to the qualities of Clearness (Non-Ambiguity and Non-Obscurity) and Impressiveness Chapter 18. J.B.''s new ideas derived from Logic APPENDIX Chapter 1. Præcognita, or preliminary and general indications, concerning Logic, according to the Aristotelians Chapter 2. Of Aristotle''s ten predicaments Chapter 3.
Of Aristotle''s Post-predicaments Chapter 4. Modes of discussion--Aristotelian and Socratic Chapter 5. Of discussion--disputation--argumentation--or debate: viz. of that branch of the Aristotelian logic which takes that operation for its subject ESSAY ON ETHICS Chapter 1. Of Well-being and Ill-being in general--Happiness and Unhappiness Chapter 2. Sole and constant End of Action, or object of man''s pursuit, well-being Chapter 3. Field of Ethics--its Divisions Chapter 4. Virtue, what--Virtue self-regarding & extra-regarding--Prudence, its relation to self-regarding--Probity, Benevolence and Beneficence, their relation to Extra-regarding--Virtue and Vice unmeaning but for Pain & Pleasure Chapter 5.
Virtue--its modifications Chapter 6. Of Beneficence and Benevolence Chapter 7. Of Vanity and Pride Chapter 8. Of Propriety, and its connection with Utility Chapter 9. Of propriety, as between self-regarding or teleclectic Prudence on the one hand, and Probity and Beneficence taken together, on the other Chapter 10. Aristotle''s Virtues--Virtues in general Chapter 11. Fortitude Chapter 12. Temperance Chapter 13.
Of Justice--its coincidence with probity Chapter 14. Veracity--how reducible to prudence, probity and beneficence Chapter 15. Of propriety, with reference to the pleasures and pains of amity APPENDIX Chapter 1. Modes of exercising the function of practical moralist Chapter 2. Deontologist or Writing Moralist--proper and improper Modes of exercising this Function Chapter 3. Of the causes of immorality Chapter 4. Fictitious entities deriving their import from the pleasures and pains of the popular or moral sanction--their import--their pernicious influence DIDACOLOGIA Chapter 1. Art and Science Division Chapter 2.
Uses APPENDIX Generals or Particulars--Abstractions or Concretions which first.