The Approach to PhilosophyC. Scribner's Sons, 1905 - 448 psl. |
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Rezultatai 1–5 iš 42
5 psl.
... expression , some medium in which to register the degree and form of its activity . Such we recognize as the environment of life , the real objects among which it is placed ; which it may change , or from which it may suffer change ...
... expression , some medium in which to register the degree and form of its activity . Such we recognize as the environment of life , the real objects among which it is placed ; which it may change , or from which it may suffer change ...
13 psl.
... expression . We may be willing to defy the uni- verse , and expatriate ourselves from our natural and social environment , for the sake of the holy law of duty . Such men as Count Tolstoi have little to say of the possible , or the ...
... expression . We may be willing to defy the uni- verse , and expatriate ourselves from our natural and social environment , for the sake of the holy law of duty . Such men as Count Tolstoi have little to say of the possible , or the ...
28 psl.
... expression does not require what is distinctly another mode of intelligence , comprehen- siveness of view . It is easier , and accordingly more usual , to render an account of the moments and casual units of experience , than of its ...
... expression does not require what is distinctly another mode of intelligence , comprehen- siveness of view . It is easier , and accordingly more usual , to render an account of the moments and casual units of experience , than of its ...
36 psl.
... expression but an understand- ing mind . He has a knowledge not only of par- ticular experiences , but of human nature ; and a consciousness full and varied like society itself . But there is a kind of knowledge possessed by neither ...
... expression but an understand- ing mind . He has a knowledge not only of par- ticular experiences , but of human nature ; and a consciousness full and varied like society itself . But there is a kind of knowledge possessed by neither ...
38 psl.
... Pater , in introducing his appreciation of Wordsworth , writes that " an intimate con- sciousness of the expression of natural things , which weighs 38 THE APPROACH TO PHILOSOPHY Wordsworth The Philosophy Implied in Religion and in.
... Pater , in introducing his appreciation of Wordsworth , writes that " an intimate con- sciousness of the expression of natural things , which weighs 38 THE APPROACH TO PHILOSOPHY Wordsworth The Philosophy Implied in Religion and in.
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Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
absolute idealism agnosticism argument Aristotle attributes belief Berkeley body Christianity ciple cognitive conceived conception consciousness construed critical defined definition Descartes distinction divine doctrine empirical empiricism ence epistemology essential eternal ethics evident evil existence expression faith finite fundamental Grammar of Science Greek Hegel human hylozoism idea individual interest Kant knowl knowledge Leibniz less ligion living logical losophy Lucretius mathematical matter meaning mechanical ment metaphysics method mind monism moral motion natural science necessity ness object panpsychism pantheism Parmenides perception perfection phenomena philos philoso philosophy physical Plato poet poetry possible practical present principles problem processes Protagoras psychology rational realism reality realm regarded relation religion scepticism Schopenhauer self-consciousness sensation sense significance Socrates soul Spinoza spirit stand-point subjectivism substance teleological theism theory things thinking thought tion Translation by Jowett true truth unity universe valid virtue whole
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