Discussions on Philosophy and Literature, Education and University Reform: Chiefly from the Edinburgh Review; Cor., Vindicated, Enl., in Notes and AppendicesBlackwood, 1866 - 846 sider |
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Side 3
... nature of man was at last formally abolished , in its identification with his physical : mind became a reflex of matter ; thought a secretion of the brain . A doctrine so melancholy in its consequences , and founded on principles thus ...
... nature of man was at last formally abolished , in its identification with his physical : mind became a reflex of matter ; thought a secretion of the brain . A doctrine so melancholy in its consequences , and founded on principles thus ...
Side 7
... nature of the Deity , and explains , from first to last , the derivation of all created things . M. Cousin is the Apostle of Rationalism in France ; and we are willing to admit that the doctrine could not have obtained a more eloquent ...
... nature of the Deity , and explains , from first to last , the derivation of all created things . M. Cousin is the Apostle of Rationalism in France ; and we are willing to admit that the doctrine could not have obtained a more eloquent ...
Side 8
... nature is essentially comprehensible . For the three Ideas constitute the nature of the Deity ; and the very nature of ideas is to be conceived . God , in fact , exists to us , only in so far as he is known ; and the degree of our ...
... nature is essentially comprehensible . For the three Ideas constitute the nature of the Deity ; and the very nature of ideas is to be conceived . God , in fact , exists to us , only in so far as he is known ; and the degree of our ...
Side 11
... nature of the discussion , but for the employment of language which , from the total neglect of these speculations in Britain , will necessarily appear abstruse- not merely to the general reader . hat I Can Now , it is manifest that the ...
... nature of the discussion , but for the employment of language which , from the total neglect of these speculations in Britain , will necessarily appear abstruse- not merely to the general reader . hat I Can Now , it is manifest that the ...
Side 15
... nature and origin of this notion ( or notions ) as a psychological phænomenon . Before Kant , philo- sophy was rather a deduction from principles , than an inquiry concerning principles themselves . At the head of every system a ...
... nature and origin of this notion ( or notions ) as a psychological phænomenon . Before Kant , philo- sophy was rather a deduction from principles , than an inquiry concerning principles themselves . At the head of every system a ...
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Discussions on Philosophy and Literature, Education and University Reform ... Sir William Hamilton Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1852 |
Discussions on Philosophy and Literature, Education and University Reform ... Sir William Hamilton Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1852 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
absolute academical admitted afford ancient Aristotle Arts asserts attempt body Buschius Cambridge Church College competent conceived condition consciousness consequently consistories constitution Crotus Cullen cultivation degree Descartes divine doctrine Dr Whewell Edinburgh Eobanus Epistolæ Erasmus established examination exclusively exercise existence fact faculties favour former German highest honour Hutten hypothesis ignorance instruction intellectual intelligence knowledge laws of thought learned lectures Leibnitz less letters logic logicians Malebranche mathematical mathematician matter mean ment mind moral nature necessary necessity object observation opinion Organon original Oxford patronage perception phænomena phænomenon philosophy Plato practice predicate present principle Professor proposition quod reasoning regard Reid Reuchlin schools Scotland seminaries Sir Robert Inglis speculation statutes supposed syllogism term theology theory things thought tion truth Tutors University of Cambridge University of Edinburgh University of Oxford whilst whole wholly words
Populære avsnitt
Side 308 - ... with their correlatives freedom of choice and responsibility — man being all this, it is at once obvious that the principal part of his being is his mental power. In Nature there is nothing great but Man, In Man there is nothing great but Mind.
Side 14 - As the conditionally limited (which we may briefly call the conditioned) is thus the only possible object of knowledge and of positive thought — thought necessarily supposes conditions. To think is to condition ; and conditional limitation is the fundamental law of the possibility of thought.