“ There is no more generally acknowledged fact in human nature, than the extreme difficulty at first felt in conceiving any thing as possible, which is in contradiction to long established and familiar experience ”
John Stuart Mill, A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive (1843). copy citation
Author | John Stuart Mill |
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Source | A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive |
Topic | difficulty contradiction |
Date | 1843 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/27942/27942-h/27942-h.html |
Context
“show, that our capacity or incapacity of conceiving a thing has very little to do with the possibility of the thing in itself; but is in truth very much an affair of accident, and depends on the past history and habits of our own minds. There is no more generally acknowledged fact in human nature, than the extreme difficulty at first felt in conceiving any thing as possible, which is in contradiction to long established and familiar experience; or even to old familiar habits of thought. And this difficulty is a necessary result of the fundamental laws of the human mind. When we have often seen and thought of two things together, and have never in any one instance either seen or thought of them separately, there is by the primary law of association an increasing difficulty, which may in the end become insuperable, of conceiving the two things apart.”
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