On Truth: A Systematic InquiryKegan Paul, Trench & Company, 1889 - 580 pagini |
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Pagina 6
... consider later on . A second mental association which men commonly form is that between " what is especially true " and what is " demonstrable by reasoning . " This association is due to the fact that most of our knowledge is gained ...
... consider later on . A second mental association which men commonly form is that between " what is especially true " and what is " demonstrable by reasoning . " This association is due to the fact that most of our knowledge is gained ...
Pagina 15
... considering arguments against its possibility- What these mean - Some truth in them - Also a false assumption and an error of fact - Mistake as to an implication - Self - know- ledge like our knowledge of others - Primary cognitions ...
... considering arguments against its possibility- What these mean - Some truth in them - Also a false assumption and an error of fact - Mistake as to an implication - Self - know- ledge like our knowledge of others - Primary cognitions ...
Pagina 16
... consider any one to be " out of his mind " who sincerely professed that he could not know his own existence with entire certainty . It is , there- fore , to be feared that some readers may be impatient at meeting with an argument ...
... consider any one to be " out of his mind " who sincerely professed that he could not know his own existence with entire certainty . It is , there- fore , to be feared that some readers may be impatient at meeting with an argument ...
Pagina 20
... considering the operations of our own minds . In the morning of life this is especially the case , and young children are occupied exclusively with things external . Nothing can well be more false than the assertion that our knowledge ...
... considering the operations of our own minds . In the morning of life this is especially the case , and young children are occupied exclusively with things external . Nothing can well be more false than the assertion that our knowledge ...
Pagina 21
... consider what he was directly conscious of in so doing , and he will see that he was conscious of performing that act . While doing it he will , of course , have remained " himself , " and while doing it will also have felt a variety of ...
... consider what he was directly conscious of in so doing , and he will see that he was conscious of performing that act . While doing it he will , of course , have remained " himself , " and while doing it will also have felt a variety of ...
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
absolutely abstract ideas action activity actual affirm amongst animals apprehend assertion believe bodily body called carbonic acid causation cause certainty changes chapter colour conceive conception consciousness consentience consider corresponding course creatures deny direct distinct emotions energy evident existence experience express external fact faculty felt force fundamental G. H. Lewes human hyæna idealism imagination immaterial inference inorganic instinct intel intellectual intelligence judgment kind knowledge known law of contradiction less living material matter means memory mental mind moral motion natural selection nature nervous never Nevertheless objects organisms ourselves oxygen parenchyma particles perceive perception phenomena physical science plants pleasurable possess principle protoplasm Protozoa qualities reason recognize reflection reflex reflex action relations rience seen self-evident sensations sense sensuous sounds spinal cord spontaneous structure substance supposed supreme things thought tion tissue true truth ultimate uncon unconscious unconscious inference unity universe various whole words