An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy: And of the Principal Philosophical Questions Discussed in His WritingsLongmans, Green, and Company, 1889 - 650 páginas |
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Página 6
... thing known and other objects compared with it , but between the thing known and the mind knowing . All language recognises a distinction between myself -the Ego - and a world , either material , or spiritual , or both , external to me ...
... thing known and other objects compared with it , but between the thing known and the mind knowing . All language recognises a distinction between myself -the Ego - and a world , either material , or spiritual , or both , external to me ...
Página 9
... thing from the Phe- nomenon , and equally real ; many of them would say , much more real , being the permanent Reality , of which the other is but the passing manifestation . They be- lieve that there is a real universe of " Things in ...
... thing from the Phe- nomenon , and equally real ; many of them would say , much more real , being the permanent Reality , of which the other is but the passing manifestation . They be- lieve that there is a real universe of " Things in ...
Página 11
... thing for him to know . It is in this form that the doctrine of the Relativity of Knowledge is held by the greater ... thing in a place , not because the Noumenon , the Thing in itself , is in any place , but because it is the law of our ...
... thing for him to know . It is in this form that the doctrine of the Relativity of Knowledge is held by the greater ... thing in a place , not because the Noumenon , the Thing in itself , is in any place , but because it is the law of our ...
Página 12
... Thing , but a mode in which the mind is compelled to represent it . Time and Space are only modes of our perceptions , not modes of existence , and higher Intelligences are possibly not bound by them . Things , in themselves , are ...
... Thing , but a mode in which the mind is compelled to represent it . Time and Space are only modes of our perceptions , not modes of existence , and higher Intelligences are possibly not bound by them . Things , in themselves , are ...
Página 14
... Thing in itself ; that we cannot know its inmost nature or essence . The inmost nature or essence of a Thing is apt to be regarded as something unknown , which , if we knew it , would explain and account for all the phenomena which the ...
... Thing in itself ; that we cannot know its inmost nature or essence . The inmost nature or essence of a Thing is apt to be regarded as something unknown , which , if we knew it , would explain and account for all the phenomena which the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Absolute abstract admit affirm argument Aristotle assertion Association psychology attri attributes belief biped called cause cognition colour conceive concept consciousness contradiction Crown 8vo deny Descartes Dissertations on Reid distinction doctrine Edition evidence existence experience expression extension external fact faculties feeling finite Gifford Lectures gilt top Hamilton human Ibid idea Illustrations inconceivable inference infinite intuition intuitive knowledge judgment knowledge known Law of Contradiction laws Laws of Thought Lectures Logic M'Cosh Mansel mathematics matter Max Müller meaning ment mental merely metaphysical mind mode moral muscular nature never notion Noumena Noumenon object opinion perceive perception phenomena philosophers possibilities of sensation predicate premises present Primary Qualities principle proposition prove psychological reality reason recognise relation relative says sense Sir W SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON space supposed syllogism theory thing thinker thought tion true truth volitions vols whole words
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