... circumstance alone be so inherently peculiar to a single object. It is by adding circumstance to circumstance that we obtain a composite feature or mark which as a whole cannot be supposed to be associated with more than a single object. The process... Social Diagnosis - Side 305af Mary Ellen Richmond - 1917 - 511 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| West Virginia. Supreme Court of Appeals - 1906 - 796 sider
...associated with more than a single object. The process of constructing an inference of identification thus consists usually in adding together a number of circumstances,...of there being more than one object so associated." By omission to complain of want of sufficient authentication of the documentary evidence just discussed,... | |
| John Henry Wigmore - 1913 - 1226 sider
...associated with more than a single object. The process of constructing an inference of identification thus consists usually in adding together a number of circumstances,...of there being more than one object so associated. The process thus corresponds accurately to the general principle of Relevancy (described ante, No.... | |
| James McKeen Cattell - 1918 - 592 sider
...associated with more than a single object. The process of constructing an inference of identification thus consists usually in adding together a number of circumstances,...of there being more than one object so associated. Continuing, he says, in discussing the terms identity, alike, similar, and resemblance: We remember... | |
| James McKeen Cattell - 1918 - 602 sider
...associated with more than a single object. The process of constructing an inference of identification thus consists usually in adding together a number of circumstances,...of there being more than one object so associated. Continuing, he says, in discussing the terms identity, alike, similar, and resemblance : We remember... | |
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