Purely logical distinctions are therefore seen to be a class of purely logical relations, i.
As purely logical functions, they are altogether lacking in content or meaning.
There has, Kant claims, been no more fruitful source of illusion throughout the whole history of philosophy than the belief in an absolute necessity that is purely logical.
It is the denial of a purely logical criterion of truth, and the insistence that truth is always dependent on psychological conditions.
This intellectual process of construction is purely logical; no psychological element in the sense of the will to believe enters into it or colours it in any way.
The need was intellectual in the purely logicalmeaning of the term, and it was met by a purely logical construction.
My test of apriority will be purely logical: Would experience be impossible, if a certain axiom or postulate were denied?
But I must insist, at the outset, that our problem is purely logical, and that all psychological implications must be excluded to the utmost possible extent.
My results also, therefore, will be purely logical.
My test of the à priori will be purely logical: what knowledge is necessary for experience?
But this sense of necessity is purely logical, and has no emotional importance.
Indeed, some psychologists have gone so far as to claim that the distinction of a fact as mental is a purely logical distinction.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "purely logical" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.