| George Berkeley - 1922 - 346 lehte
...down, but because it was beside my purpose to examine and refute it in a discourse concerning vision. [So that in strict truth the ideas of sight, when...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, and in consequence of such or such actions.] It is, I say, evident from what has... | |
| Lewis White Beck - 1966 - 332 lehte
...down, but because it was beside my purpose to examine and refute it in a discourse concerning vision. So that in strict truth the ideas of sight, when we...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, and in consequence of such or such actions. It is, I say, evident from what has... | |
| Colin Murray Turbayne - 355 lehte
...claim that visual space has no depth until the objects of sight are augmented with tactual experience: "So that in strict truth the ideas of sight, when...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, and in consequence of such and such actions" (Principles, sect. 44). In keeping... | |
| Jules David Law - 1993 - 282 lehte
...Essay, 2.1.4. 29 Externality always meaning, for Berkeley, exteriority to mind. See Treatise, $90. the ideas of sight, when we apprehend by them distance...ideas of touch will be imprinted in our minds at such or such distances of time, and in consequence of such or such actions. It is, I say, evident from what... | |
| Margaret Dauler Wilson - 1999 - 550 lehte
...a treatise on vision. He continues: So that in strict truth the ideas of sight, when we apprehended by them distance and things placed at a distance,...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, in consequence of such and such actions." This passage, together with its correlate... | |
| Frederick C. Beiser - 2002 - 758 lehte
...touched the body. As Berkeley explains in the Principles: "The ideas of sight, when we apprehend them by distance, and things placed at a distance, do not...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such a distance of time, and in consequence of such and such actions" (§44; compare Essay §44-46). On... | |
| Alva Noë, Evan Thompson - 2002 - 644 lehte
...thought he had established in the New Theory of Vision: ... in strict truth the ideas of sight,... do not suggest or mark out to us things actually existing at a distance, but only admonish us that ideas of touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, and in consequence... | |
| Kenneth Winkler - 2005 - 474 lehte
...to be marked by one name, and so to be reputed as one thing," and at PHK 44 he observes that ideas do not "suggest or mark out to us things actually existing at a distance." Later (PHK 147 and 148) he speaks of ideas or sensations that "mark out unto us the existence of finite... | |
| John Russell Roberts - 2007 - 200 lehte
...are at no distance from the mind. Rather, [t]he former are marks and prognostics of the latter. ... So that in strict truth the ideas of sight, when we...touch will be imprinted in our minds at such and such distances of time, and in consequence of such or such actions. The intuitive support for atomism, the... | |
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