No one is likely to deny that a question is distinct both from a conclusion and from an assertion; and an assertion will be found to be equally distinct from a conclusion. For, if we rest our affirmation on arguments, this s...

Buy Now From Amazon

No one is likely to deny that a question is distinct both from a conclusion and from an assertion; and an assertion will be found to be equally distinct from a conclusion. For, if we rest our affirmation on arguments, this shows that we are not asserting; and, when we assert, we do not argue. An assertion is as distinct from a conclusion, as a word of command is from a persuasion or recommendation. Command and assertion, as such, both of them, in their different ways, dispense with, discard, ignore antecedents of any kind, though antecedents may have been a sine quâ non condition of their being elicited. They both carry with them the pretension of being personal acts.

Similar Products

The Gods of Revolution (Worlds of Christopher Dawson)Brideshead RevisitedThe Case for Jesus: The Biblical and Historical Evidence for ChristYoung Goodman Brown and Other Short Stories (Dover Thrift Editions)The Complete Stories (FSG Classics)Frankenstein (Barnes & Noble Classics)Crime and PunishmentThe Communist Manifesto