The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General Literature, 20. köideLittle, Brown, 1886 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 48
Page 37
... sensations of colour for one couched internal and the external was , no doubt , originally the surface of differ from all he has experienced before : the new facts consist the body , with which the subject or self was identified ; and ...
... sensations of colour for one couched internal and the external was , no doubt , originally the surface of differ from all he has experienced before : the new facts consist the body , with which the subject or self was identified ; and ...
Page 40
... sensations or character and relations of the three states , modes , or acts1 situation , but that regularly these latter with remarkable of this subject , which are commonly held to be the invari- promptness and certainty alter it . We ...
... sensations or character and relations of the three states , modes , or acts1 situation , but that regularly these latter with remarkable of this subject , which are commonly held to be the invari- promptness and certainty alter it . We ...
Page 41
... sensations are metaphysically subject- subjective modifications in an idealistic_sense , there is no need at ive . this stage either to assert or deny that . But if the meaning be ( ii . ) that sensations are presented as modes of the ...
... sensations are metaphysically subject- subjective modifications in an idealistic_sense , there is no need at ive . this stage either to assert or deny that . But if the meaning be ( ii . ) that sensations are presented as modes of the ...
Page 42
... sensation depends upon certain physical quantities , varying directly in some proportion as these vary . Hence , since our habitual standpoint is the physical not the psy- chological , we conceive sensory objects as having an intensity ...
... sensation depends upon certain physical quantities , varying directly in some proportion as these vary . Hence , since our habitual standpoint is the physical not the psy- chological , we conceive sensory objects as having an intensity ...
Page 43
... sensations or sensations before there are any movements , but one in which change of sensation is followed by change of movement , the link between the two being a change of feeling . action on Having thus simplified the question , we ...
... sensations or sensations before there are any movements , but one in which change of sensation is followed by change of movement , the link between the two being a change of feeling . action on Having thus simplified the question , we ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acid Almagest appears attention body Brandenburg British called carriages cent century character chief cholera church colour complete connexion consciousness construction contains cyanide death distinct district east East Prussia edition Elohistic engine England English especially extensive fact feeling feet France Frederick gauge German Government Greek heat Hipparchus ideas important inches inhabitants intensity king known land later length less locomotive London means ment miles movements nearly object observed original passed passenger population ports position present principal province Prussia psalms psychological Ptolemy Punjab pyramid Pythagoras Pytheas quæstors Quakers quarantine quaternion quinine Quintilian Rabelais Racine rails railway rainband Raphael Rashi Ravenna regarded river Roman sensations side Sikh Silesia sleepers square square miles station Talmud temperature tion tons town traffic train waggons whole yellow fever