A Handbook of the History of Philosophy |
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Page 58
... constitute the archetypal form or Idea of the concrete individuals which are denoted by it . Thus the general names " house , ' bed , ' animal , " stand for the self - existent archetypal ideas of all the par- ticulars and singulars ...
... constitute the archetypal form or Idea of the concrete individuals which are denoted by it . Thus the general names " house , ' bed , ' animal , " stand for the self - existent archetypal ideas of all the par- ticulars and singulars ...
Page 68
... constitute it a statue ; the melody which is produced by the notes of the flute ; the relation of the sounds which give the octave ; the particular conjunction of letters which make the word ; the articulate whole into which the parts ...
... constitute it a statue ; the melody which is produced by the notes of the flute ; the relation of the sounds which give the octave ; the particular conjunction of letters which make the word ; the articulate whole into which the parts ...
Page 72
... constitutes the human soul or life of the man as man . The discussion of these subjects will be found in Aristotle's Physics and in the De anima . The goal of all human activity , the highest human good , is happiness , which consists ...
... constitutes the human soul or life of the man as man . The discussion of these subjects will be found in Aristotle's Physics and in the De anima . The goal of all human activity , the highest human good , is happiness , which consists ...
Page 75
... constitute induction - although in themselves the principles of thought which this process presupposes are prior . The above brief and necessarily imperfect sketch will suffice to show the enormous range as well as depth of * We need ...
... constitute induction - although in themselves the principles of thought which this process presupposes are prior . The above brief and necessarily imperfect sketch will suffice to show the enormous range as well as depth of * We need ...
Page 129
... constitute our perceptions or thoughts of things , the latter are merely states or modi- fications of the soul caused by these perceptions . But it would be just as irrational to suppose that even the first of these , i.e. our necessary ...
... constitute our perceptions or thoughts of things , the latter are merely states or modi- fications of the soul caused by these perceptions . But it would be just as irrational to suppose that even the first of these , i.e. our necessary ...
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absolute abstract Anaxagoras ancient Aristotle attained Averroës century Christian conceived conception consciousness consists constitutes contained deduction Descartes determination Dialectic distinction divine doctrine dogmatic edition element empirical Empiricism English Essay essence Ethics existence experience expression external Fichte formal Gnostic Greek Hegel Hegelian hence Herakleitos Herbart history of philosophy human Hume Hylozoists ideal ideas inasmuch individual infinite intellectual Kant Kant's Leibnitz less logical Malebranche material matter Memoir merely metaphysical method mind momenta monads Monism moral motion namely nature negation Neo-Platonism Notes object Ontology original Paracelsus Parmenides perception phenomena philo physical Plato Portrait position possible present principle problem psychology pure Pyrrho realisation reality reason regarded religion says scepticism Schelling Scholasticism Schopenhauer sense Sokrates soul speculative Spinoza substance synthesis Theism theology Theory of Knowledge theosophy things thinkers thought tion Trans Transcendental treatise truth ultimate unity universal vols whole Woodcuts words
Popular passages
Page 199 - When we run over libraries, persuaded of these principles, what havoc must we make? If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number'} No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.