Logic, broadly speaking, is distinguished by the fact that its propositions can be put into a form in which they apply to anything whatever.


Mysticism and Logic: And Other Essays, Chapter V (p. 75), Longmans, Green & Co. 1919


Logic, broadly speaking, is distinguished by the fact that its propositions can be put into a form in which they apply to anything whatever.

Logic, broadly speaking, is distinguished by the fact that its propositions can be put into a form in which they apply to anything whatever.

Logic, broadly speaking, is distinguished by the fact that its propositions can be put into a form in which they apply to anything whatever.

Logic, broadly speaking, is distinguished by the fact that its propositions can be put into a form in which they apply to anything whatever.