Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic, Volum 3W. Blackwood and sons, 1866 |
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Side 25
... conceive the possi- bility of its not existing now . But if we are so able , then is the form not necessary ; for the criterion of a contingent cognition is , that we can represent to our- selves the possibility of its non - existence ...
... conceive the possi- bility of its not existing now . But if we are so able , then is the form not necessary ; for the criterion of a contingent cognition is , that we can represent to our- selves the possibility of its non - existence ...
Side 26
... if he has done so much in the half - dozen treatises that still remain , what may we not conceive him to have accomplished in the a See below , p . 34.-ED. - II . forty which are recorded and seem to 26 LECTURES ON LOGIC .
... if he has done so much in the half - dozen treatises that still remain , what may we not conceive him to have accomplished in the a See below , p . 34.-ED. - II . forty which are recorded and seem to 26 LECTURES ON LOGIC .
Side 41
... conceiving , and the object conceived ; as perception , both the act of per- ceiving and the thing perceived ; imagination , both the act of imagining and what is imagined . Now this is a source of great vagueness in our philoso- phical ...
... conceiving , and the object conceived ; as perception , both the act of per- ceiving and the thing perceived ; imagination , both the act of imagining and what is imagined . Now this is a source of great vagueness in our philoso- phical ...
Side 42
... conceived , the term concept should be used . " Concept is the English of the Latin conceptum , id quod conceptum ... conceiving . Whether it might not , in like manner , be proper to introduce the term percept for the object of ...
... conceived , the term concept should be used . " Concept is the English of the Latin conceptum , id quod conceptum ... conceiving . Whether it might not , in like manner , be proper to introduce the term percept for the object of ...
Side 60
... conceived a science , which considers thought not merely as determined by its necessary and universal laws , but as contingently affected by the empirical conditions under which thought is actually exerted ; - which shows what these ...
... conceived a science , which considers thought not merely as determined by its necessary and universal laws , but as contingently affected by the empirical conditions under which thought is actually exerted ; - which shows what these ...
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Lectures on Metaphysics and Logic: 3: Lectures on logic. 1 William Hamilton Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1860 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abstract affirmative affords animal applied Aristotle attributes Author called categorical character Compare complex comprehension conceived concept conclusion consequent consideration considered constitute contained Contradiction conversant definition determined disjunctive distinction distinguished division doctrine Edition employed enounced equally example exclusively existence expressed extension fact figure former genus give given Greek History hypothetical Identity illustration impossible individual inference judgment kind knowledge Krug language LECT Lectures likewise Logic logicians Logik major manner matter meaning merely middle mind minor mood nature necessary negative notion object observe Octavo once opposite original particular philosophers position possible predicate premises present principle proposition quantity question reasoning reference regard relation relative rule simple sion Sorites species stand subsumption sumption syllogism term thing third thought tion true truth universal various Volumes whole
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