The Science of ThoughtLongmans, Green, and Company, 1887 - 664 páginas |
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Página 3
... admit in theory the possibility of sensations which do not assume the character of percepts , of per- cepts which have not yet reached the stage of concepts , and of concepts still waiting to be named . But possibility is very different ...
... admit in theory the possibility of sensations which do not assume the character of percepts , of per- cepts which have not yet reached the stage of concepts , and of concepts still waiting to be named . But possibility is very different ...
Página 16
... admit that the dog , the conventional dog , who is all the time lying at my feet on the carpet , has no perception of the carpet as such , or a concept of the carpet as a piece of workmanship or a work of art . Though he feels , and ...
... admit that the dog , the conventional dog , who is all the time lying at my feet on the carpet , has no perception of the carpet as such , or a concept of the carpet as a piece of workmanship or a work of art . Though he feels , and ...
Página 21
... admits of no simile or meta- phor anywhere , an act which we cannot explain by any other , an ultimate fact in our subjective world , as motion is in the objective world . French philosophers imagined that by their tenet of Penser , c ...
... admits of no simile or meta- phor anywhere , an act which we cannot explain by any other , an ultimate fact in our subjective world , as motion is in the objective world . French philosophers imagined that by their tenet of Penser , c ...
Página 25
... admit a kind of eocene period , during which percepts gradually rise towards the sphere of concepts , though the admission of such a period is again more the result of reasoning than of actual experience . The very moment we become con ...
... admit a kind of eocene period , during which percepts gradually rise towards the sphere of concepts , though the admission of such a period is again more the result of reasoning than of actual experience . The very moment we become con ...
Página 27
... admit that we do not know in the least how animals philosophise , and how an ox recognises his stable - door . With this proviso I am quite ready to admit that animals may have percepts , and that they share in common with man what Kant ...
... admit that we do not know in the least how animals philosophise , and how an ox recognises his stable - door . With this proviso I am quite ready to admit that animals may have percepts , and that they share in common with man what Kant ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract acts adjectives admit animal apodictic applied Aristotle Aryan Aryan languages attributes become beginning Berkeley called causality colour conceived concepts connotation consciousness Crown 8vo Darwin definition derived Descartes digger distinguish doubt Edition exist experience explain express fact genus German grammar Greek guage Herbert Spencer human mind Hume ideas imagine instance intellect intuition Kant Kant's KHAD knowledge language and thought Latin Leibniz likewise Logic matter meaning meant originally metaphor Mill Monon mortal nature never Noiré nominal nouns object origin of language Pânini perceived percepts philosophers phonetic possible predicate priori proposition R. A. PROCTOR reason roots Sanskrit Science of Language Science of Thought seems sensations sense sensuous singular sounds space speak species substance suffixes supposed syllogism synthetical proposition T. H. Green theory things tion true truth verb Woodcuts words YUDH
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