Brownson's Quarterly Review, 1 tomasOrestes Augustus Brownson Benjamin H. Greene, 1860 |
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138 psl.
... Sir William Hamilton . His ter- minology is continually deceiving us , and we frequently find that we have understood his terms in a contrary sense from the one intended . His style has its merits , but is not our good old - fashioned ...
... Sir William Hamilton . His ter- minology is continually deceiving us , and we frequently find that we have understood his terms in a contrary sense from the one intended . His style has its merits , but is not our good old - fashioned ...
140 psl.
... Sir William Hamilton , and has been refuted again and again in the pages of our Review . The gist of Sir William's philosophy is , that the Infinite is unthinkable , inconceivable , and marks for us merely the negation of thought . The ...
... Sir William Hamilton , and has been refuted again and again in the pages of our Review . The gist of Sir William's philosophy is , that the Infinite is unthinkable , inconceivable , and marks for us merely the negation of thought . The ...
141 psl.
Orestes Augustus Brownson. pendent of us or of our thought . But Kant and Sir William Hamilton agree that we cannot think things as they are in themselves , and that we can have direct and immediate in- tuition only of phenomena . The ...
Orestes Augustus Brownson. pendent of us or of our thought . But Kant and Sir William Hamilton agree that we cannot think things as they are in themselves , and that we can have direct and immediate in- tuition only of phenomena . The ...
142 psl.
... Sir William Hamilton - we cannot accept ; for the object is thought only as presented , and is itself the same , whether thought or unthought . To think it implies . a change or modification in us , but none in it : to say we cannot ...
... Sir William Hamilton - we cannot accept ; for the object is thought only as presented , and is itself the same , whether thought or unthought . To think it implies . a change or modification in us , but none in it : to say we cannot ...
143 psl.
... and that the apodictic element of all thought is the intuition of real and necessary , and therefore , infinite Being . Mr. Mansel adopts the teaching of Sir William Hamilton , 1860. ] 143 Limits of Religious Thought .
... and that the apodictic element of all thought is the intuition of real and necessary , and therefore , infinite Being . Mr. Mansel adopts the teaching of Sir William Hamilton , 1860. ] 143 Limits of Religious Thought .
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