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O.29
ciple until a catalogue of disasters comes to teach us the need of looking e'er we leap. The rule of pragmatism is a specimen clause of such a methodeutic of explication, and but a specimen. I know no considerable essay at a complete organon. When there is any demand for such a thing, the supply will be at hand, such as it may be, I can warrant. As an example of an apparently answerless problem that a pure analysis will solve, take this. Suppose first no laws to be, then that nothing exist, finally that there is no Idea, no time, no consequence, even in possibility. Why should not this blank Nothing have been all? The analysis is not easy, as far as I see; but it can
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