A Handbook of the History of PhilosophyG. Bell and sons, 1886 - 419 sider |
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Side 16
... treatise of a purely theological . character , and devoid of all philosophic interest . It is in India , that we first find a distinct and unmis- takable philosophic development . In the sixth century before Christ , when the non ...
... treatise of a purely theological . character , and devoid of all philosophic interest . It is in India , that we first find a distinct and unmis- takable philosophic development . In the sixth century before Christ , when the non ...
Side 25
... treatise , its main thesis being that into that whence things arise , they must return ; that this primal substance , which he is the first to designate by the word principle ( apxn ) , is a formless and infinite matter , incorruptible ...
... treatise , its main thesis being that into that whence things arise , they must return ; that this primal substance , which he is the first to designate by the word principle ( apxn ) , is a formless and infinite matter , incorruptible ...
Side 44
... treatise of Anaxagoras . Plato relates that he came personally into contact with Parmenides while a boy — a statement which Ueberweg credits , though generally considered doubtful . Sokrates took part in three campaigns during the ...
... treatise of Anaxagoras . Plato relates that he came personally into contact with Parmenides while a boy — a statement which Ueberweg credits , though generally considered doubtful . Sokrates took part in three campaigns during the ...
Side 45
... treatise , it would not have borne the traditional title of those of his predecessors , " On Nature , " but rather " On Man . " The immediate object of his teaching was the attainment of clear ideas or concepts , the highest of all ...
... treatise , it would not have borne the traditional title of those of his predecessors , " On Nature , " but rather " On Man . " The immediate object of his teaching was the attainment of clear ideas or concepts , the highest of all ...
Side 104
... treatise addressed to a Pagan friend which contains the first distinct enunciation of the Christian doctrine of the trinity , though the conception of the Holy Ghost labours under some ambiguity , being still partially identified with ...
... treatise addressed to a Pagan friend which contains the first distinct enunciation of the Christian doctrine of the trinity , though the conception of the Holy Ghost labours under some ambiguity , being still partially identified with ...
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A Handbook of the History of Philosophy: For the Use of Students Ernest Belfort Bax Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1886 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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
Populære avsnitt
Side 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.