An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy: And of the Principal Philosophical Questions Discussed in His WritingsLongmans, Green, and Company, 1889 - Broj stranica: 650 |
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Stranica 45
... argument . We have here a direct issue of fact , of which every one is a judge who will take the trouble to read Sir W. Hamilton's Essay . I maintain that what M. Cousin affirms and Sir W. Hamilton denies , is the cognoscibility not of ...
... argument . We have here a direct issue of fact , of which every one is a judge who will take the trouble to read Sir W. Hamilton's Essay . I maintain that what M. Cousin affirms and Sir W. Hamilton denies , is the cognoscibility not of ...
Stranica 53
... argument , that the Infinite and the Absolute are unknowable by us because the only conceptions we are able to form ... arguments , that our ideas of the Infinite and the Absolute are purely negative , and the * Discussions , p . 17 ...
... argument , that the Infinite and the Absolute are unknowable by us because the only conceptions we are able to form ... arguments , that our ideas of the Infinite and the Absolute are purely negative , and the * Discussions , p . 17 ...
Stranica 55
... argument . And here ends the positive part of his argumentation . There remains his refutation of opponents . After an examination of Schelling's opinion , into which I need not follow him , he grapples with M. Cousin , against whom he ...
... argument . And here ends the positive part of his argumentation . There remains his refutation of opponents . After an examination of Schelling's opinion , into which I need not follow him , he grapples with M. Cousin , against whom he ...
Stranica 56
... argument were discussed , instead of two only : but I now perceive that the remaining argument is ad hominem merely , and has reference to M. Cousin's confusion of the Absolute with the Infinite . Let me ask , en passant , why M. Cousin ...
... argument were discussed , instead of two only : but I now perceive that the remaining argument is ad hominem merely , and has reference to M. Cousin's confusion of the Absolute with the Infinite . Let me ask , en passant , why M. Cousin ...
Stranica 57
... argument that motion is impossible , because if a body moves it must either move where it is or where it is not ; an argument , by the way , for which Sir W. Hamilton often expresses high respect ; and of which he has here produced a ...
... argument that motion is impossible , because if a body moves it must either move where it is or where it is not ; an argument , by the way , for which Sir W. Hamilton often expresses high respect ; and of which he has here produced a ...
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Absolute abstract admit affirm argument Aristotle assertion Association psychology attri attributes belief biped called cause cognition colour conceive concept consciousness contradiction Crown 8vo deny Descartes Dissertations on Reid distinction doctrine Edition evidence existence experience expression extension external fact faculties feeling finite Gifford Lectures gilt top Hamilton human Ibid idea Illustrations inconceivable inference infinite intuition intuitive knowledge judgment knowledge known Law of Contradiction laws Laws of Thought Lectures Logic M'Cosh Mansel mathematics matter Max Müller meaning ment mental merely metaphysical mind mode moral muscular nature never notion Noumena Noumenon object opinion perceive perception phenomena philosophers possibilities of sensation predicate premises present Primary Qualities principle proposition prove psychological reality reason recognise relation relative says sense Sir W SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON space supposed syllogism theory thing thinker thought tion true truth volitions vols whole words
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