Categories

Categories are either classes under which all our Notions of things may be grouped, or classes under which all our Thoughts of things may be grouped; the former called Logical, we owe to Aristotle, and the latter called Metaphysical, we owe to Kant. The Logical, so derived, that group our notions, are ten in number: Substance or Being, Quantity, Quality, Relation, Place, Time, Position, Possession, Action, Passion. The Metaphysical, so derived, that group our thoughts, are twelve in number: (1) as regards quantity, Totality, Plurality, Unity; (2) as regards quality, Reality, Negation, Limitation; (3) as regards relation, Substance, Accident, Cause and Effect, Action and Reaction; (4) as regards modality, Possibility and Impossibility, Existence and Nonexistence, Necessity and Contingency. John Stuart Mill resolves the categories into five, Existence, Co-existence, Succession, Causation, and Resemblance.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Categorical imperative * Catesby, Mark
[wait for the fun]
Castro, Vaca de
Castrogiovanni
Castruccio-Castracani
Catacombs
Catalani, Angelica
Catalonia
Catamar`ca
Cata`nia
Catanza`ro
Categorical imperative
Categories
Catesby, Mark
Catesby, Robert
Cath`ari, or Catharists
Catharine, St., of Alexandria
Catharine I.
Catharine II. the Great
Catharine de' Medici
Catharine of Aragon
Catharine of Braganza
Catharine of Sienna

Nearby

Links here from Chalmers

Aristotle
Boethius, Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus
Googe, Barnaby
Occam, William Of