Personality: The Beginning and End of Metaphysics and a Necessary Assumption in All Positive PhilosophyW. Blackwood and Sons, 1883 - 130 pages |
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Page 5
... maintained that " the highest end of human reason is to reduce many particular effects to a few general causes , such as electricity , gravity , cohesion , & c . " But Lewes does not enter into the region of meta- physics properly so ...
... maintained that " the highest end of human reason is to reduce many particular effects to a few general causes , such as electricity , gravity , cohesion , & c . " But Lewes does not enter into the region of meta- physics properly so ...
Page 6
... maintains that introspection can only lead to illusion . This he makes little effort to prove . He relies on the stock arguments of Gall and others , that in order to reflect on a state of mind , we must first pass out of that state ...
... maintains that introspection can only lead to illusion . This he makes little effort to prove . He relies on the stock arguments of Gall and others , that in order to reflect on a state of mind , we must first pass out of that state ...
Page 8
... maintains that they cannot know themselves , without first ceasing to be , in which case there would be nothing left to be known . Of course , any such theory which involves the denial of knowledge is self- destructive ; for if we can ...
... maintains that they cannot know themselves , without first ceasing to be , in which case there would be nothing left to be known . Of course , any such theory which involves the denial of knowledge is self- destructive ; for if we can ...
Page 14
... maintained that Ens , or the really existent , must be unum et continuum . Their opponents asserted that the really exist- ent was plura et discontinua , proceeding on the equally false assumption that nothing existed which could not be ...
... maintained that Ens , or the really existent , must be unum et continuum . Their opponents asserted that the really exist- ent was plura et discontinua , proceeding on the equally false assumption that nothing existed which could not be ...
Page 19
... maintains that common notions , such as man , freedom , virtue , good and evil , are vague and indefinite , he asserts that his notions of God and substance are indisput- ably clear . Even if they were so , it is not on clear ...
... maintains that common notions , such as man , freedom , virtue , good and evil , are vague and indefinite , he asserts that his notions of God and substance are indisput- ably clear . Even if they were so , it is not on clear ...
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Personality, the Beginning and End of Metaphysics: And a Necessary ... Alfred Williams Momerie No preview available - 2017 |
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absolute action apprehend argument from design atoms Author Book brain cause Cheap Edition Church of Scotland CLASSICS FOR ENGLISH cloth cognition Comte conception consciousness Crown 8vo denied doctrine Edinburgh Editor Engravings enlarged existence experience external fact Fcap feeling Fifth Edition forces freedom French morocco Geography gilt Glasgow Hamilton HAMLEY Hence Herbert Spencer History human Hume idea intelligence J. G. Lockhart J. S. Mill JOHN John Galt knowledge laws Lewes LL.D M'INTOSH Maps Memoir mental merely meta metaphysical mind motion motives movements nature necessity never numerous Illustrations OLIPHANT origin ourselves perceive phenomena philosophy physical Poems Portrait Positivists post 8vo present principle produce Professor Bain proved reflection result revised says Scottish Second Edition seems self-adjustment sensation sense sentient Sermons Seventh Edition Sir THEODORE MARTIN supposed theory things Third Edition thought tion Translated Treatise true universe University of Edinburgh volition vols volume WILLIAM word
Popular passages
Page 53 - The baby new to earth and sky, What time his tender palm is prest Against the circle of the breast, Has never thought that 'this is I :' But as he grows he gathers much, And learns the use of 'I,' and 'me,' And finds 'I am not what I see, And other than the things I touch.
Page 51 - FLOWER in the crannied wall, I pluck you out of the crannies, I hold you here, root and all, in my hand, Little flower — but if I could understand What you are, root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is.
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