The Science of Thought, Volumen2Longmans, Green & Company, 1887 - 664 páginas |
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Página x
... language has led us in this nineteenth century are very different from those that were within the reach even of the profound- est thinkers in the eleventh and fourteenth centuries . If there must be a name for the theories established ...
... language has led us in this nineteenth century are very different from those that were within the reach even of the profound- est thinkers in the eleventh and fourteenth centuries . If there must be a name for the theories established ...
Página xi
... Languages , ' long before Darwin . No student of the Science of Language can be anything but an evolu- tionist , for , wherever he looks , he sees nothing but evolution going on all around him . But with regard to one question to which ...
... Languages , ' long before Darwin . No student of the Science of Language can be anything but an evolu- tionist , for , wherever he looks , he sees nothing but evolution going on all around him . But with regard to one question to which ...
Página xviii
... LANGUAGE . Words the signs of concepts , 77. Attributes always abstract , 80. The word Name , 81. Language the true history of the human mind , 83. Growth of Mind and Evo- lution of Nature , 83. Parallelism between the study of Mind and ...
... LANGUAGE . Words the signs of concepts , 77. Attributes always abstract , 80. The word Name , 81. Language the true history of the human mind , 83. Growth of Mind and Evo- lution of Nature , 83. Parallelism between the study of Mind and ...
Página xix
... Language as the specific difference between animal and man , 163. Schleicher on language , 164. Darwin's in- sensible degrees , 164. Herakleitos , 167. Darwin's arguments against language as a specific difference , 169 . Materials and ...
... Language as the specific difference between animal and man , 163. Schleicher on language , 164. Darwin's in- sensible degrees , 164. Herakleitos , 167. Darwin's arguments against language as a specific difference , 169 . Materials and ...
Página xx
... language , 196. True meaning of ' Ovoμатолоitа , 196. Emotional and Rational Language , 198. Mischief to scholarship from ignoring the barriers of roots , 203. Pooh , a sound expressive of contempt , 205. Roots are ultimate facts in the ...
... language , 196. True meaning of ' Ovoμатолоitа , 196. Emotional and Rational Language , 198. Mischief to scholarship from ignoring the barriers of roots , 203. Pooh , a sound expressive of contempt , 205. Roots are ultimate facts in the ...
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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.