Judgment


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1 Judgment as an act or faculty of the mind, its contrast with the act of conception or with the faculties of understanding and reason.
2 The division of judgments in terms of the distinction between the theoretical and the practical.
3 The analysis of practical or moral judgments, value judgments, judgments of good and evil, means and ends, categorical and hypothetical imperatives.
4 The distinction between the aesthetic and the teleological judgment.
5 The nature of theoretical judgments.
6 The linguistic expression of judgments, sentences and propositions.
7 The judgment as a predication, the classification of subjects and predicates.
8 The judgment as relational, types of relation.
9 The division of theoretical judgments according to formal criteria.
10 The division of judgments according to quantity, universal, particular, singular, and indefinite propositions.
11 The division of judgments according to quality, positive, negative, and infinite propositions.
12 The division of judgments according to modality, necessary and contingent propositions, problematic, assertoric, and apodictic judgments.
13 The classification of judgments by reference to relation, simple and composite propositions, categorical, hypothetical, and disjunctive judgments.
14 The order and connection of judgments.
15 The formal opposition of judgments, the square of opposition.
16 The conversion of propositions, the problem of immediate inference.
17 Reasoning as a sequence of judgments, the chain of reasoning.
18 The differentiation of judgments according to origin, ground, or import.
19 Self-evident and demonstrable propositions, immediate and mediated, intuitive and reasoned judgments.
20 Analytic and synthetic judgments, trifling and instructive propositions.
21 A priori and a posteriori, nonexistential and existential judgments, the problem of a priori synthetic judgments.
22 The division of judgments into the determinant and the reflective, judgments as constitutive or as regulative.
23 Degrees of assent, certainty and probability to.
24 The truth and falsity of judgments.


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