Page:The World and the Individual, Second Series (1901).djvu/120

Rh structure of our world has, within its own limits, validity.

But what are the limits of this way of viewing things? What is the precise nature and range of its validity?

We have followed the logical genesis of the categories of what we may now call The World of Description, from their simplest forms to the point where we must abandon the attempt to develope here more fully their detail.

The most fundamental of these categories is that of Likeness and Difference. Upon the basis of a consideration of the nature of this primal conception, we come to view the Objective World as, in one aspect of its Being, a realm of Objects of Possible Attention. The Categories of Relation, which have to do with the connections existing amongst these Objects, we could not