On Truth: A Systematic InquiryKegan Paul, Trench & Company, 1889 - 580 pagini |
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Pagina 8
... objects , but has much greater difficulty in directing its gaze in upon itself . We are spontaneously impelled to form judgments about external things , or " direct judg- ments , " but we are not so impelled to reflect on our judgments ...
... objects , but has much greater difficulty in directing its gaze in upon itself . We are spontaneously impelled to form judgments about external things , or " direct judg- ments , " but we are not so impelled to reflect on our judgments ...
Pagina 21
... objects of cognition , we must nevertheless experience them in order to have the direct cognition of our own ... object consciously perceived . At the same time he may , if he pleases , direct his mind so as to perceive either that he ...
... objects of cognition , we must nevertheless experience them in order to have the direct cognition of our own ... object consciously perceived . At the same time he may , if he pleases , direct his mind so as to perceive either that he ...
Pagina 35
... objects , which objects make various im- pressions upon the mind of the person who regards them . That person himself is the subject of such actually present impressions which he is directly conscious of as his own present experience ...
... objects , which objects make various im- pressions upon the mind of the person who regards them . That person himself is the subject of such actually present impressions which he is directly conscious of as his own present experience ...
Pagina 36
... objects upon which it looks . They thus belong to the category of what is objective . That they are but states of the mind which regards them does not prevent their being looked at as objects external to that mind , while it is in the ...
... objects upon which it looks . They thus belong to the category of what is objective . That they are but states of the mind which regards them does not prevent their being looked at as objects external to that mind , while it is in the ...
Pagina 44
... mysterious than is the rest of our knowledge . How we get any knowledge at all , how we see objects , how we feel anything , is most myste- See above , p . 6 . rious , and all our knowledge , deeply considered , 44 ON TRUTH .
... mysterious than is the rest of our knowledge . How we get any knowledge at all , how we see objects , how we feel anything , is most myste- See above , p . 6 . rious , and all our knowledge , deeply considered , 44 ON TRUTH .
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
absolutely abstract ideas action activity adverted affirm amongst animals apprehend assertion beauty believe bodily body called carbonic acid causation cause certainty changes chapter colour conception consciousness consentience consider course creatures Demy 8vo deny direct distinct Edition emotions evident existence experience express external fact felt Fuegians fundamental G. H. Lewes groups of feelings human humerus idealism idealists imagination immaterial inference inorganic instinct intel intelligence John Stuart Mill judgment kind knowledge known language law of contradiction less living material matter means mind moral motion natural selection nature never Nevertheless objects organs ourselves oxygen parenchyma perceive phenomena physical science pleasurable possess principle protoplasm qualities reason recognize reflection reflex reflex action relations rience scepticism seen self-evident sensations sensuous Small crown 8vo sounds spinal cord spontaneously substance supposed things thought tion tissue true truth ultimate uncon unconscious unconscious inference unity universe various words