Massachusetts Quarterly Review, 1 tomasCoolidge & Wiley, 1848 |
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Rezultatai 6–10 iš 42
174 psl.
... universal proposition , and according as this is affirmative or negative , the conclusion is so too . All ratiocination , therefore , starts from a general proposition , principle , or assumption . " " The other premiss is always ...
... universal proposition , and according as this is affirmative or negative , the conclusion is so too . All ratiocination , therefore , starts from a general proposition , principle , or assumption . " " The other premiss is always ...
179 psl.
... universal and uncondi- tional , and unless it is so , it cannot have any title to the name of Cause . Uniform experience , therefore , he says , is not suffi cient to establish the fact of Causation . But if so , it is clearly incapable ...
... universal and uncondi- tional , and unless it is so , it cannot have any title to the name of Cause . Uniform experience , therefore , he says , is not suffi cient to establish the fact of Causation . But if so , it is clearly incapable ...
184 psl.
... Universal experience being impossible , Knowledge must be so also . Its first principles must be assumptions . " The whole problem of the investigation of nature is , What are the fewest assumptions , which , being granted , the order ...
... Universal experience being impossible , Knowledge must be so also . Its first principles must be assumptions . " The whole problem of the investigation of nature is , What are the fewest assumptions , which , being granted , the order ...
188 psl.
... universal , and therefore definite , in opposition to what is accidental , and thus indefinable . Were each object in Nature a definite fact , it would be necessary to study each separate thing by itself ; each grain of sand on the sea ...
... universal , and therefore definite , in opposition to what is accidental , and thus indefinable . Were each object in Nature a definite fact , it would be necessary to study each separate thing by itself ; each grain of sand on the sea ...
189 psl.
... universal Truth , betrays an entire misconception of the whole process of Knowing . The whole argument is this : a finite , that is , a thing , must have definite dimensions , and thus cannot contain the Infinite . But a thing can no ...
... universal Truth , betrays an entire misconception of the whole process of Knowing . The whole argument is this : a finite , that is , a thing , must have definite dimensions , and thus cannot contain the Infinite . But a thing can no ...
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