Aristotelous Peri Psychēs: Aristotle on the Vital PrincipleMacmillan & Company, 1855 - 326 sider |
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Side 60
... vision would be its Vital Principle , as vision , abstractedly considered , is the essence of the eye ; but the eye is the matter of vision , and if vision be wanting , then , save in name , it is an eye no longer , any more than is ...
... vision would be its Vital Principle , as vision , abstractedly considered , is the essence of the eye ; but the eye is the matter of vision , and if vision be wanting , then , save in name , it is an eye no longer , any more than is ...
Side 61
... vision that of an eye , so watching is the reality of Vital Principle ; which is to the body what vision is to an eye , and its own property to any instrument ; but this is to be under- stood of a body in potentiality . Thus , as an eye ...
... vision that of an eye , so watching is the reality of Vital Principle ; which is to the body what vision is to an eye , and its own property to any instrument ; but this is to be under- stood of a body in potentiality . Thus , as an eye ...
Side 93
... vision are here very briefly alluded to , while particular attention has there been given to the ear and hearing . CHAPTER VII . THE visible is that for which vision is the sense , and the visible is both colour and something which is ...
... vision are here very briefly alluded to , while particular attention has there been given to the ear and hearing . CHAPTER VII . THE visible is that for which vision is the sense , and the visible is both colour and something which is ...
Side 96
... vision would be so accurate as to render an ant visible in the sky . The opinion , in fact , in- volves an impossibility ; for vision is produced by some kind of impression upon the visual organ , and as this cannot possibly be effected ...
... vision would be so accurate as to render an ant visible in the sky . The opinion , in fact , in- volves an impossibility ; for vision is produced by some kind of impression upon the visual organ , and as this cannot possibly be effected ...
Side 110
... vision of the visible and invi- sible , and smell of the odorous and the inodorous , and by inodorous is meant whatever is either alto- gether without odour , or has but a very faint odour ; and a sense analogous to this is attached to ...
... vision of the visible and invi- sible , and smell of the odorous and the inodorous , and by inodorous is meant whatever is either alto- gether without odour , or has but a very faint odour ; and a sense analogous to this is attached to ...
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Aristotelous Peri Psyches: Aristotle on the Vital Principle Aristotle Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2019 |
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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.