Aristotelous Peri Psychēs: Aristotle on the Vital PrincipleMacmillan & Company, 1855 - 326 sider |
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Side 15
... alarm , we are thrown into the state of persons under terror ; and if this be true , it is clear that all such emotions are material conditions . So that the definition of any one of them , as CH . I. ] 15 VITAL PRINCIPLE .
... alarm , we are thrown into the state of persons under terror ; and if this be true , it is clear that all such emotions are material conditions . So that the definition of any one of them , as CH . I. ] 15 VITAL PRINCIPLE .
Side 21
... true ; and that Homer , therefore , has done well in repre- senting Hector as " changing his mind while he lay . " Thus he does not employ the term mind as a faculty for the attainment of truth , but makes mind to be identical with the ...
... true ; and that Homer , therefore , has done well in repre- senting Hector as " changing his mind while he lay . " Thus he does not employ the term mind as a faculty for the attainment of truth , but makes mind to be identical with the ...
Side 30
... true that it communicates to itself the motions which it imparts to the body . Now , the body is moved by translation , so that the Vital Principle should change with the body and be set free from it , either wholly or in its parts ...
... true that it communicates to itself the motions which it imparts to the body . Now , the body is moved by translation , so that the Vital Principle should change with the body and be set free from it , either wholly or in its parts ...
Side 111
... true , to all the sentient organs to be insensible to impressions when objects are placed immediately upon them ; but it is peculiar to man ( as may be proved experimentally ) , to be unable to perceive odours without inspiring . So ...
... true , to all the sentient organs to be insensible to impressions when objects are placed immediately upon them ; but it is peculiar to man ( as may be proved experimentally ) , to be unable to perceive odours without inspiring . So ...
Side 119
... true , a kind of solution for this diffi- culty , in that the other senses also admit of several contraries ; as in the voice there are not only the acute and grave but also the strong and weak , the rough and smooth , with yet other ...
... true , a kind of solution for this diffi- culty , in that the other senses also admit of several contraries ; as in the voice there are not only the acute and grave but also the strong and weak , the rough and smooth , with yet other ...
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abstractions admit alluded analogous Anaxagoras Animalm animals appear appetite Aristotle Aristotle's BERNARD DRAKE brain Cambridge cause CHARLES KINGSLEY ciple cloth colour constituted contrary creatures Crown 8vo Democritus derived diaphanous distinction doctrine earth elements Empedocles essence faculty Fcap Fellow of St fire flesh functions Harrow School hearing homogeneous imagination imparted implies impressionable individual indivisible inquiry JOHN WILLIAM COLENSO John's College kind knowledge Leucippus living body locomotion M.A. Fellow maintain manifest matter medium Metaphys mind motion motor moved nature Note nourished nutrition object odour opinion passage perceive percussion pharynx physiology plants Plato potentiality PRELUDE TO CHAPTER properties qualities reality recognise regarded relation sapid savour seems self-motive sensation sense sensibility sentient organs sentient perception shew shewn signifies smell sonorous sound supposed syllogism tangible impressions taste term things thinking thought Timæus tion Touch Treatise Trinity College University of Cambridge visible vision Vital Principle writers Xenocrates
Populære avsnitt
Side 327 - HUMPHREYS.— Exercitationes lambicae; or, Progressive Exercises in Greek Iambic Verse. To which are prefixed, the Rules of Greek Prosody, with copious Notes and Illustrations of the Exercises. By ER HUMPHREYS, LL.D. Head Master of the Cheltenham Grammar School. Second Edition.