< Page:Mind (New Series) Volume 12.djvu
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THE DISJUNCTIVE JUDGMENT. 501
into which a class is divided, we may infer that it has not the peculiar properties of this genus. Here once more we have in view only the exhaustiveness of the division. And with this I may conclude my argument, which goes to show that the function of the disjunctive judgment both in science and in practical reasonings is to be exhaustive and not
necessarily exclusive.
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