The Science of Thought, Volumen2Longmans, Green & Company, 1887 - 664 páginas |
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Página xii
... conceived to exist except as self - conscious . With it esse could be nothing if not percipi per se . There is , as I have shown in my book , some truth in this , but I have reserved the full treatment of that question for another book ...
... conceived to exist except as self - conscious . With it esse could be nothing if not percipi per se . There is , as I have shown in my book , some truth in this , but I have reserved the full treatment of that question for another book ...
Página 3
... conceived , concepts without being named , the answer is somewhat difficult . We may have to admit in theory the possibility of sensations which do not assume the character of percepts , of per- cepts which have not yet reached the ...
... conceived , concepts without being named , the answer is somewhat difficult . We may have to admit in theory the possibility of sensations which do not assume the character of percepts , of per- cepts which have not yet reached the ...
Página 25
... conceive it , even if it be only under the most general categories of our mind . Sokrates , the moment he is named , ceases to be a mere . percept . 1 ' There is no perception without an intellectual interpretation of sensation ...
... conceive it , even if it be only under the most general categories of our mind . Sokrates , the moment he is named , ceases to be a mere . percept . 1 ' There is no perception without an intellectual interpretation of sensation ...
Página 26
... conceived as something which we afterwards call colour . So that here again we arrive at the conclusion with which we started , namely that though sensations , percepts , and concepts may be distinguished , they are within our own mind ...
... conceived as something which we afterwards call colour . So that here again we arrive at the conclusion with which we started , namely that though sensations , percepts , and concepts may be distinguished , they are within our own mind ...
Página 29
... conceive of concepts also , as apart from words , the very word concept would seem to prove . But we cannot be too much on our guard against that very common error that things which can be distinguished can therefore claim an ...
... conceive of concepts also , as apart from words , the very word concept would seem to prove . But we cannot be too much on our guard against that very common error that things which can be distinguished can therefore claim an ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract acts adjectives admit animal apodictic applied Aristotle Aryan attributes become Berkeley called causality colour conceived concepts connotation consciousness Crown 8vo Darwin definition demonstrative element derived Descartes digger distinguish doubt Edition exist experience express fact genus German grammar Greek guage Herbert Spencer human mind Hume ideas imagine instance intellect intuition Kant Kant's knowledge language and thought Latin Leibniz likewise Logic logicians matter meaning meant originally metaphor Mill Monon mortal nature never Noiré nominal nouns object origin of language Pânini perceived percepts philo philosophers phonetic possess possible predicate priori proposition R. A. PROCTOR reason roots Sanskrit Schopenhauer Science of Language Science of Thought seems sensations sense sensuous simply singular sound space speak species substance suffixes supposed syllogism synthetical proposition T. H. Green theory things tion true truth verb vols Woodcuts words
Pasajes populares
Página 258 - Words become general, by being made the signs of general ideas : and ideas become general, by separating from them the circumstances of time, and place, and any other ideas that may determine them to this or that particular existence.
Página 609 - We have but faith : we cannot know; For knowledge is of things we see ; And yet we trust it comes from thee, A beam in darkness : let it grow.
Página 261 - For example, does it not require some pains and skill to form the general idea of a triangle ? (which is yet none of the most abstract, comprehensive, and difficult ;) for it must be neither oblique nor rectangle, neither equilateral, equicrural, nor scalenon, but all and none of these at once.