The document defines key terms related to judgment:
1) Judgment is the mental process of pronouncing agreement or disagreement between two ideas by comparing them, understanding each, and coming to a conclusion.
2) An enunciation is the mental product of judgment, while a proposition is the external manifestation such as a written or spoken statement.
3) Predication is the mental process of affirming or negating one concept as the subject in relation to another as the predicate, producing an enunciation or proposition. Judgments must correspond to reality to be considered true.
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Enunciation and Propositions
The document defines key terms related to judgment:
1) Judgment is the mental process of pronouncing agreement or disagreement between two ideas by comparing them, understanding each, and coming to a conclusion.
2) An enunciation is the mental product of judgment, while a proposition is the external manifestation such as a written or spoken statement.
3) Predication is the mental process of affirming or negating one concept as the subject in relation to another as the predicate, producing an enunciation or proposition. Judgments must correspond to reality to be considered true.
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Explanation of Definition
1. The mental steps required for a judgment
a) The intellect must understand the two ideas about which it has to make a judgment. Audiatur et altera pars- Audi alteram partem (or audiatur et altera pars) is a Latin phrase meaning "listen to the other side", or "let the other side be heard as well".[1] It is the principle that no person should be judged without a fair hearing in which each party is given the opportunity to respond to the evidence against them b) The intellect must be compare the two ideas, study the comprehension of each, recognize their identity or non-identity, and then be ready to pronounce an agreement or disagreement between them. Else, rash judgment! c) The intellect must express in a mental act the agreement or disagreement of the two ideas. It is this mental pronouncement of agreement or disagreement which constitutes the essence of the judgment. 2. The constituent elements of the judgment a. The two ideas.. the matter of the judgment b. Mental pronouncement. The form of the judgment c. Look at from the standpoint of its matter. The judgment is a composition of two distinct elements, the ideas. But from the standpoint of its form, the mental pronouncement, it is a single intellectual act. 3. Basis of Judgment As the idea is an intellectual representation of a thing, so the judgment too is a representation of things as they are in themselves. If a judgment coincides with reality, it is true; if it is not; it is false. This explains why we are not at liberty to judge as we please. Agreement of judgment with reality is the test of truth. Every judgment made by the intellect implies and presupposes the existence of reality, and this implication of existence is known as the existential import of the judgment.
Enunciation and Propositions
1. Judgment: The phase Judgment is the mental operation that pronounces the agreement or disagreement between two ideas or terms. This is the second mental act of the mind. A. Apprehension of concepts, the previous mental act or phase, from which the results are ideas and terms is the first stage. Accordingly, ideas in the mind are placed side by side (juxtapose) to each other. B. Mental comparison of concepts. This is the stage where the recognition between ideas, either identity or non-identity, occurs. After the juxtaposition of ideas, ideas are compared to each other whether it is identical or different from each other. C. Mental Predication is the pronouncement of the identity or non-identity of the concepts being compared. The mental product of this affirmation or negation of terms is what we call enunciation. D. Written Predication is the stage of expressing an enunciation in a form of a verbal statement or manifestation, wether written or oral. The product of which is what we call proposition.
2. Predication: The Process
Predication is the mental process of affirmation of one concept by way predicate, Of another concept by way of subject. (Pinon, 1988). Predication is the affirmation or negation of the agreement or disagreement of terms (ideas) producing an enunciation ( a mental sentence) or a proposition(external manifestation) 3. Enunciation: The Product Enunciation is the mental product of mental predication. Merriam Webster defines enunciation as derived from the Latin enuntiatus, past participle of enuntiare from e+nuntiare, which means to report, declare, pronounve. 4. Proposition: The Manifestation Proposition is th external manifestation, linguistic expression or the sensible sign of the judgment. A proposition is a sentence. A proposition is a kind of sense which affirms or denies something. It is evident that in discussion of grammar, a sentence is a collection of words which expresses a complete thought. By this definition, a proposition is consideres as a sentence, however, inversely, not all sentences are considered propositions.
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