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1908 Nov 4
Logic
12

life by which he is compelled to acknowledged this or
that I shall term his 'Experience,') the sense of temporal
succession (by which, for example, if one has seen a man
turn completely round, so as to face at last the same way
as at first, one knows whether he turned to the right or to
the left, which sense perhaps consists in recollecting what
it was that one previously recollected;) the immediate sense
of logical antecedence and consequence (which differs
from the immediate sense of temporal antecedence and
succedence in that while this latter is the immediate perception
that a person who remembers the state of things A may thereby
remember the state of things, B, which is thus constituted as subsequent
to A, i.e., it may in A be remembered, the former is the immediate

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