Abstract
Distinguishes two senses of 'judgment' on the one hand as meaning a state of 'conviction' or 'belief', and on the other hand as meaning an act of 'affirmation' or 'assertion'. Certainly conviction and assertion stand in close relation
to each other, but they delineate two heterogeneous logical
spheres, and thereby divide the total field of the theory
of judgment into two neighbouring but separate sub-fields. Once this is done it is shown to have implications for our understanding especially of the phenomenon of negation, and of the distinction between negation as affirmation of a negative state of affairs, and negation as act of contradicting the judgment someone else has made.