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Status: Complete

1908 Nov 11
Logic
31

Preserve. Wanted when corrected.

I go on to explain what I mean by one thing being Determined to Accord
with another. If a subject Μ possesses a character, μ, and if in any
kind of state of things that includes the actual state of things, if Μ
possesses μ, then so does ν, while if the actual state of things had not been
such that Ν would posses μ if Μ possessed it, then Ν would not have possessed
μ; or if Μ possesses μ, and the general state of things is such that in whatever more
special state of things Μ may possess μ it will likewise be the case the Ν
possesses the character ν although if the possession of μ by M had not
so entailed the possession of ν by Ν, Ν would not have possessed ν; or
if the following five conditions are fulfilled, namely, 1st, that L possesses the character λ,
2nd, that the existing state of things is of such a kind that every more specific state of things in
which L should possesses the character λ, would be a state of things in which Ν would possess
the character v, 3rd, that the actual state of things is such that whenever the second

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