Works of Thomas Hill Green: Philosophical works

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Longmans, Green, 1918
 

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But how can it have faded if they have been constantly repeated?
284
Experience according to his account of it cannot be a parent
290
Possibility of such fictitious ideas implies refutation of Humes
297
Humes doctrine of morals parallel to his doctrine of nature
301
Conformity to law not the moral good but a means to
320
Of moral goodness Butlers account is circular
327
Yet he admits passions which produce pleasure but proceed
333
This is the real thing from which abstraction is supposed to start
341
49
354
Development of it by Clarke which breaks down for want of true
355
As real existence the simple idea carries with it invented
360
57
362
for person moved
367
63
369
THEIR
373
879
380
The simple idea as ectype other than mere sensation
393
Only like Locke by confusing feeling of touch with the judg
394
Correlativity of cause and substance
396
Though his order of statement disguises this inconsistency
400
PART II
410
It assumes that simple ideas are consciously referred to things
423
Mr Spencers doctrine of the independence of matter as either
426
An abstract idea may be a simple
443
How do I know my own real existence?Lockes answer
445
72
449
For feeling of relations cannot arise 1 from grouping
451
And is equivalent to what he afterwards calls knowledge
452
Two distinct senses of accumulation of feelings
466
Mr Lewes doctrine of the social medium
472
Nor can they be uniform antecedents of consciousness
476
In fact he ignores the distinction between succession of feelings
477
For physiology cannot account for a process in which it is itself
483
He nimself implies that the real is not the external as such
494
120
496
But such real essence a creature of thought
500
122
502

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