... in these modifications, a quality, a phenomenon of mind, absolutely new, has been superadded, which was never involved in, and could therefore never have been evolved out of, the mere faculty of knowledge. The faculty of knowledge is certainly the... The Brain as an Organ of Mind - Page 169by H. Charlton Bastian - 1880 - 708 lehteFull view - About this book
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1881 - 634 lehte
...less convinced he could not. He has said : " We are able to conceive a being possessed of the powers of recognizing existence, and yet wholly void of all...pleasure, and of all powers of desire and volition/' We can, indeed, conceive of a pure spirit, though we cannot of course imagine such an entity, having... | |
| James Sully - 1884 - 746 lehte
...classes, feeling, knowing, and willing, goes a certain way in the same direction when he says that "the faculty of knowledge is certainly the first in order, inasmuch as it is the conditio sine qu^non of the others". By this he means that we only have feelings or desires in eo far as we are conscious... | |
| James Sully - 1884 - 748 lehte
...classes, feeling, knowing, and willing, goes a certain way in the same direction when he says that "the faculty of knowledge is certainly the first in order, inasmuch as it is the conditio tine qua non of the others". By this he means that we only have feelings or desires in so far as we... | |
| Daniel Hack Tuke - 1884 - 158 lehte
...object upon which his affections may be employed, and unconscious of these affections themselves, we can conceive a being possessed of the power of recognizing existence, and yet wholly devoid of all feeling of pain and pleasure, and of all powers of desire and volition. That which was... | |
| 1884 - 676 lehte
...object upor which his affections may be employed, and unconscious of these affections themselves, we can conceive a being possessed of the power of recognizing existence, and yet wholly devoid of all feeling of pain and pleasure and of all powers of desire and volition. That which was... | |
| James Sully - 1885 - 746 lehte
...classes, feeling, knowing, and willing, goes a certain way in the same direction when he says that " the faculty of knowledge is certainly the first in...as it is the conditio sine qua non of the others". By this he means that we only have feelings or desires in so far as we are conscious of them, and that... | |
| James Sully - 1892 - 428 lehte
...feeling, knowing, and willing, may be said to go a certain way in the same direction when he writes : " The faculty of knowledge is certainly the first in...inasmuch as it is the conditio sine qua non of the others ". By this he means that we only have feelings or desires in so far as we ai£ conscious of them, and... | |
| George Frederick Stout - 1896 - 340 lehte
...therefore never have been evolved out of, the mere faculty of knowledge ". He then proceeds as follows : " We are able to conceive a being possessed of the power of recognising existence, and yet wholly devoid of all feeling of pain and pleasure, and of all powers... | |
| G. F. Stout, G F - 2002 - 320 lehte
...therefore never have been evolved out of, the mere faculty of knowledge ". He then proceeds as follows : " We are able to conceive a being possessed of the power of recognising existence, and yet wholly devoid of all feeling of pain and pleasure, and of all powers... | |
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