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Transcription
1908 Nov 11
Logic
28
mind by substantially the same means by which he is
aware of what is passing in his own, though I do not say he
is as completely cognizant of the one as of the other. He no more
thinks about the other's mind than he does of his own. What these
means are we shall minutely consider later; but even now we must
consider them a little. In doing so I must use, in a more general
sense, a word which I have just now used in a special sense,
and must carefully explain this more general sense, inasmuch
as it is one of the most important terms in every
branch of science: it is the word Determination. Before a man
has Determined what his conduct shall be, it may on one occasion
be of one sort and on another of another sort. It may at one
time, for example, be just, so far as he can discern what justice
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