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Anyway, my grandmother Rozalia was Hungarian, like my grandfather Aaron, but she used to smoke these cigarettes she imported from France. She used to smoke them in a long cigarette holder. She had long black hair and cushiony breasts, and she would stand by the fireplace in the front room of her New Rochelle house and smoke her cigarettes like a countess or something. Annie used to play with her dolls and I used to build Lego houses by the fire while the grownups talked about important matters. When we got older, Annie used to tease my grandmother all the time. Whenever she wanted to really get her goat, she would ask,Grandma, how do you make Hungarian chicken soup? and my grandmother would say, “Get out of here, you, and wave her away with a hand covered with diamonds, and Annie would say, “First you steal a chicken, and Grandma would laugh each and every time. I dont know why I wasn’t at Grandma’s house that day of the pony ride — if it ever happened. Maybe I was at a Yankee’s game with Aaron. It was only a short subway ride to the Bronx, and my mother let us go alone all the time. We never got molested or anything. Thanks also to our fabulous new PA, Kate Blazeby; to our hardworking and always smiling finance manager, Sarah Middle; to Dani Brown, who does a terrific job running our social media; to Amy Robinson for her work with the team; and to her son Kit Robinson, the perfect model for Noah! And huge thanks to Chris Webb and Chris Diplock who keep our computers and all our tech going, and to Martin Walsh and Erin Brown who curate our video content. § 1. Induction properly so called, as distinguished from those mental operations, sometimes, though improperly, designated by the name, which I have attempted in the preceding chapter to characterize, may, then, be summarily defined as Generalization from Experience. It consists in inferring from some individual instances in which a phenomenon is observed to occur, that it occurs in all instances of a certain class; namely, in all whichresemble the former, in what are regarded as the material circumstances. 130 § 3. But reasoning, even in the widest sense of which the word is susceptible, does not seem to comprehend all that is included, either in the best, or even in the most current, conception of the scope and province of our science. The employment of the word Logic to denote the theory of Argumentation, is derived from the Aristotelian, or, as they are commonly termed, the scholastic, logicians. Yet even with them, in their systematic treatises, Argumentation was the subject only of the third part: the two former treated of Terms, and of Propositions; under one or other of which heads were also included Definition and Division. By some, indeed, these previous topics were professedly introduced only on account of their connection with reasoning, and as a preparation for the doctrine and rules of the syllogism. Yet they were treated with greater minuteness, and dwelt on at greater length, than was required for that purpose alone. More recent writers on logic have generally understood the term as it was employed by the able author of the Port Royal Logic; viz., as equivalent to the Art of Thinking. Nor is this acceptation confined to books, and scientific inquiries. Even in ordinary conversation, the ideas connected with the word Logic include at least precision of language, and accuracy of classification: and we perhaps oftener hear persons speak of a logical arrangement, or of expressions logically defined, than of conclusions logically deduced from premises. Again, a man is often called a great logician, or aman of powerful logic, not for the accuracy of his deductions, but for the extent of his command over premises; because the general propositions required for explaining a difficulty or refuting a sophism, copiously and promptly occur to him: because, in short, hisknowledge, besides being ample, is well under his command for argumentative use. Whether, therefore, we conform to the practice of those who have made the subject their particular study, or to that of popular writers and common discourse, the province of logic will include several operations of theintellect not usually considered to fall within the meaning of the terms Reasoning and Argumentation. I started to pass at him and somebody grabbed my arm when it went back. I could see I was outclassed, that I couldnt whip the entire bar bunch, so I said: Yes, Annie, I remember. Im not. I thought you might like company for dinner, that’s all. Thought you might like to meet some genuine Maine types, she said, and grinned. It took him some moments to process the question. How was he feeling? Like shit. It was all starting to come back now. Curtis Esmonde. Monica Stokes. Hed gone through the kitchen, down into the cellar and unlocked the door. Then he was here. But if that was the case, why hadnt they told him? It made no sense. Then again, they were a pretty weird couple. Was it all part of the service? A nice little surprise? Or, as he had wondered, to make amends? Rob nodded. Well, a lawyer came to us and told us a very sketchy outline of what his story would be in case we co-operate by giving him immunity. This, however, though the most common, is not the only meaning which propositions are ever intended to convey. In the first place, sequences and co-existences are not only asserted respecting Phenomena; we make propositions also respecting those hidden causes of phenomena, which are named substances and attributes. A substance, however, being to us nothing but either that which causes, or that which is conscious of, phenomena; and the same being true,mutatis mutandis, of attributes; no assertion can be made, at least with a meaning, concerning these unknown and unknowable entities, except in virtue of the Phenomena by which alone they manifest themselves to our faculties. When we say Socrates was contemporary with the Peloponnesian war, the foundation of this assertion, as of all assertions concerning substances, is an assertion concerning the phenomena which they exhibit—namely, that the series of facts by which Socrates manifested himself to mankind, and the series of mental states which constituted his sentient existence, went on simultaneously with the series of facts known by the name of the Peloponnesian war. Still, the proposition as commonly understood does not assert that alone; it asserts that the Thing in itself, the noumenon Socrates, was existing, and doing or experiencing those various facts during the same time. Co-existence and sequence, therefore, may be affirmed or denied not only between phenomena, but between noumena, or between a noumenon and phenomena. And both of noumena and of phenomena we may affirm simple existence. But what is a noumenon? An unknown cause. In affirming, therefore, the existence of a noumenon, we affirm causation. Here, therefore, are two additional kinds of fact, capable of being asserted in a proposition. Besides the propositions which assert Sequence or Co-existence, there are some which assert simple Existence;[36] and others assert Causation, which, subject to the explanations which will follow in the Third Book, must be considered provisionally as a distinct and peculiar kind of assertion. Suddenly he froze. We sit holding hands like children. I said:I hope not. I dont want to go to the station until this is over. And with him there, it’s likely Wendel can stay here for a little while without being recognized..