ESSAY ON MAN'S IDEAS OF POWER1857 |
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Page vi
... becomes a materialist and an atheist ; and such ideas as these have , before now , become the leading principles of a nation , and resulted in the French Revolution . And it is a great mistake that the general and first ideas are of no ...
... becomes a materialist and an atheist ; and such ideas as these have , before now , become the leading principles of a nation , and resulted in the French Revolution . And it is a great mistake that the general and first ideas are of no ...
Page vi
... becomes a materialist and an atheist ; and such ideas as these have , before now , become the leading principles of a nation , and resulted in the French Revolution . And it is a great mistake that the general and first ideas are of no ...
... becomes a materialist and an atheist ; and such ideas as these have , before now , become the leading principles of a nation , and resulted in the French Revolution . And it is a great mistake that the general and first ideas are of no ...
Page 16
... becomes connected by discovery . Take an example in civil life this man ought to be punished ; the law has connected crime and punishment , and the man has con- nected himself with crime by his own deed , and therefore the man and ...
... becomes connected by discovery . Take an example in civil life this man ought to be punished ; the law has connected crime and punishment , and the man has con- nected himself with crime by his own deed , and therefore the man and ...
Page 17
... become convinced of the existence of other things ; for they actuate or affect our conscious- ness , or they are necessarily connected with those things that do so . At the same time , consciousness is not my existence , but it is at ...
... become convinced of the existence of other things ; for they actuate or affect our conscious- ness , or they are necessarily connected with those things that do so . At the same time , consciousness is not my existence , but it is at ...
Page 25
... become familiar to us , any more than a boy finds the first lessons in reading easy . As sensations in us are in the place of signs , there is a certain degree of intensity which is better for the purpose of perception than any other ...
... become familiar to us , any more than a boy finds the first lessons in reading easy . As sensations in us are in the place of signs , there is a certain degree of intensity which is better for the purpose of perception than any other ...
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according action activity actual affections agency appear argument arise atom become beginning body bounds cause changes character chemical comes common conceive conceptions connected consciousness consequent consist constitution course depends derived determine difference direct disposition distinct electric elements energy entity equally eternal ether evidence exercises existence extension facts faculties feeling force functions give gravitation hard hold human idea imagine impossible infinite influence intelligence knowledge known less light limits manner material matter means mechanical mental mind modes moral motion move nature necessity never object operate organisation origin ourselves particles pass perfect person phenomena philosophy positive possible present principles proper properties qualities rational reality reason receive relation requires rest sensation sense sensible separate sides simple solid space stance stand substance sufficient supposed tell things thoughts tion true truth turned understanding unity weight whole
Popular passages
Page 32 - If any one will examine himself concerning his notion of pure substance in general, he will find that he has no other idea of it all, but only a supposition of he knows not what support of such qualities which are capable of producing simple ideas in us ; which qualities are commonly called accidents
Page 58 - Bodies compounded of them ; even so very hard, as never to wear or break in pieces ; no ordinary Power being able to divide what God himself made one in the first Creation.
Page 128 - The glory of the LORD shall endure for ever: the LORD shall rejoice in his works.
Page 32 - ... tortoise, and the tortoise by he knew not what. Thus here, as in all cases where we use words without distinct ideas, we talk like children, who being questioned what such a thing is that they know not, answer, Something. The idea then to which we give the name of substance being but the unknown support of qualities, which we imagine cannot subsist without something to support them, we call that support, substantia, standing under, or...
Page 91 - I say, our specific ideas of substances are nothing else but a collection of a certain number of simple ideas, considered as united in one thing.
Page 75 - This they take for an undoubted truth, which they can demonstrate beyond all exception. Now if it be certain, that those original qualities are inseparably united with the other sensible qualities, and not, even in thought, capable of being abstracted from them, it plainly follows that they exist only in the mind. But I desire...
Page 86 - ... in all our operations, whether agricultural or manufacturing, it is not we who operate, but the laws of nature which we have set in operation. It is, then, of the highest importance that we should know these laws, in order to know what we are about...
Page 27 - ... be no harm in speaking again of the mind of man and the mind of animals as a tabula rasa on which impressions are made which faint, and spontaneously develop into conceptions and general ideas. They might revive the old watchword of Locke's school ' — though it is really much older than Locke4 — 'that there is nothing in the intellect that was not before in the senses...
Page 55 - ... obvious that each of the particles of matter will, by its attraction, collect about it a condensed atmosphere of ether. If the attractions and repulsions be all inversely as the squares of the distances...
Page 65 - I have long held an opinion that the various forms under which the forces of matter are made manifest, have one common origin; are, indeed, so directly related and mutually dependent, that they are convertible, as it were, into one another, and possess equivalents of power in their action.