On Truth: A Systematic InquiryKegan Paul, Trench & Company, 1889 - 580 pagini |
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Pagina
... THE ANIMAL FACULTIES .. 342 XXIV . THE EXTERNAL RELATIONS OF ORGANISMS 367 SECTION V. SCIENCE . XXV . NATURE XXVI . Á FIRST CAUSE XXVII . EVOLUTION : 383 450 500 SECTION I. FUNDAMENTAL FACTS AND PRINCIPLES . CHAPTER I. EVIDENCE X CONTENTS .
... THE ANIMAL FACULTIES .. 342 XXIV . THE EXTERNAL RELATIONS OF ORGANISMS 367 SECTION V. SCIENCE . XXV . NATURE XXVI . Á FIRST CAUSE XXVII . EVOLUTION : 383 450 500 SECTION I. FUNDAMENTAL FACTS AND PRINCIPLES . CHAPTER I. EVIDENCE X CONTENTS .
Pagina 31
... relation whatever to the past . In " memory , " then , there are and must be two distinct elements . The first element is the reproduction before the mind of what has been before it previously , and the second element is the recognition ...
... relation whatever to the past . In " memory , " then , there are and must be two distinct elements . The first element is the reproduction before the mind of what has been before it previously , and the second element is the recognition ...
Pagina 46
... relations " also . Two children of the same mother are equally her children , and if she feels an equal love for the ... relation , are so far alike , while they cannot be thought of as " alike " unless they are also thought of as ...
... relations " also . Two children of the same mother are equally her children , and if she feels an equal love for the ... relation , are so far alike , while they cannot be thought of as " alike " unless they are also thought of as ...
Pagina 47
... relations the necessity of which they would verbally deny . For how otherwise could they affirm what would or would not be the necessary results attending such imaginary conditions ? How could they confidently declare what perceptions ...
... relations the necessity of which they would verbally deny . For how otherwise could they affirm what would or would not be the necessary results attending such imaginary conditions ? How could they confidently declare what perceptions ...
Pagina 49
... relations to things around , and for its own size and internal minute conditions ; and the latter two circumstances would demand a cause for their being as they might happen to be , even if such a body existed alone by itself in the ...
... relations to things around , and for its own size and internal minute conditions ; and the latter two circumstances would demand a cause for their being as they might happen to be , even if such a body existed alone by itself in the ...
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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