An Historical and Critical View of the Speculative Philosophy of Europe in the Ninetheenth Century..: Volume I.[-II.]John Johnstone, ... ., 1847 |
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Side xix
... spirit which breathes through the entire work , and to estimate , in this way , its general bearing . I am still of the same opinion as ever , that any one honestly and in- telligently following this course , would class Locke midway ...
... spirit which breathes through the entire work , and to estimate , in this way , its general bearing . I am still of the same opinion as ever , that any one honestly and in- telligently following this course , would class Locke midway ...
Side 5
... spirit , when once begun , ever strives after a perfected system , in which every phenomenon within or around it shall be accounted for , and every problem analyzed and solved . The history of the continued progress of this attempt to ...
... spirit , when once begun , ever strives after a perfected system , in which every phenomenon within or around it shall be accounted for , and every problem analyzed and solved . The history of the continued progress of this attempt to ...
Side 6
... spirit of the French Encyclopædia in the last century . In the present century it has been reiterated by the advocates of the positive philosophy . Vid . " Cours de Philosophie positive " -par Auguste Comte . See also the same explained ...
... spirit of the French Encyclopædia in the last century . In the present century it has been reiterated by the advocates of the positive philosophy . Vid . " Cours de Philosophie positive " -par Auguste Comte . See also the same explained ...
Side 18
... spirit takes , is apt to imagine that every such movement carries it farther from the true mark , whilst those who can take the whole course in at one compre- hensive view , see that these apparent deviations are all necessary to bring ...
... spirit takes , is apt to imagine that every such movement carries it farther from the true mark , whilst those who can take the whole course in at one compre- hensive view , see that these apparent deviations are all necessary to bring ...
Side 24
... spirit - the animal man and the spiritual man . These , however , are far from being placed before us in a scientific form , neither are they , by any means , intended to furnish a full account of our mental constitution . They are ...
... spirit - the animal man and the spiritual man . These , however , are far from being placed before us in a scientific form , neither are they , by any means , intended to furnish a full account of our mental constitution . They are ...
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An Historical and Critical View of the Speculative Philosophy of ..., Volum 1 J. D. Morell Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1846 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
absolute abstract action admit altogether analysis appears argument arise Aristotle atheism attempt attributes Bacon belief Cartesian cause chap conceptions conclusions Condillac connexion consciousness Critick Deontology Descartes Destutt de Tracy distinct divine doctrine elements empiricism error Essay evidence existence experience external fact faculty feelings finite foundation fundamental generalisation give ground Hobbes human knowledge human mind Hume idealism ideas infinite intellectual investigation judgment Kant laws Leibnitz Locke Locke's logical Malebranche matter means ment mental metaphysical method monadology monads moral mysticism nature never notion objective idealism observation ontology origin outward perception pheno phenomena philo philoso philosophical scepticism phrenology principles priori pure reason question regard Reid relation religion respecting rience scepticism sensation sensationalism sense simply speculative philosophy Spinoza spirit substance tendency term theory things thought tion true truth understanding universe validity volition whole writings
Populære avsnitt
Side 427 - the doing good to mankind, in obedience to the will of God, and for the sake of everlasting happiness.
Side 129 - It is evident the mind knows not things immediately, but only by the intervention of the ideas it has of them. Our knowledge therefore is real only so far as there is a conformity between our ideas and the reality of things.
Side xxii - To Locke, *' Conscience is nothing else than our own opinion of our own actions;" to Penn, it is the image of God, and his oracle in the souL Locke, who was never a father, esteemed " the duty of parents to preserve their children not to be understood without reward and punishment ," Penn loved his children, with not a thought for the consequences.
Side 177 - His reputation as a poet, great in his own day, low during the latter part of the seventeenth and the whole of the eighteenth centuries, has latterly revived.
Side xxi - Locke, like William Penn, was tolerant ; both loved freedom ; both cherished truth in sincerity. But Locke kindled the torch of liberty at the fires of tradition ; Penn, at the living light in the soul. Locke sought truth through the senses and the outward world ; Penn looked inward to the divine revelations in every mind.
Side xxiii - Locke declares immortality a matter with which reason has nothing to do, and that revealed truth must be sustained by outward signs and visible acts of power ; Penn saw truth by its own light, and summoned the soul to bear witness to its own glory. Locke believed " not so many men in wrong opinions as is commonly supposed, because the greatest part have no opinions at all, and do not know what they contend for;" Penn likewise vindicated the many, but it was because truth is the common inheritance...
Side 203 - It was Mr. Locke that struck the home blow : for Mr. Hobbes's character and base slavish principles in government took off the poison of his philosophy. 'Twas Mr. Locke that struck at all fundamentals, threw all order and virtue out of the world, and made the very ideas of these (which are the same as those of God) unnatural, and without foundation in our minds.
Side 354 - Universal scepticism involves a contradiction in terms. It is a belief that there can be no belief. It is an attempt of the mind to act without its structure, and by other laws than those to which its nature has subjected its operations. To reason without assenting to the principles on which its reasoning is founded, is not unlike an effort to feel without nerves, or to move without muscles.
Side 342 - I had satisfactorily succeeded in this by starting from a single principle, I proceeded to the deduction of these concepts, which I was now certain were not deduced from experience, as Hume had apprehended, but sprang from the pure understanding.
Side 83 - Duae viae sunt, atque esse possunt, ad inquirendam et inveniendam veritatem. Altera a sensu et particularibus advolat ad axiomata maxime generalia, atque ex iis principiis eorumque immota veritate judieat et invenit axiomata media : atque haec via in usu est. Altera a sensu et particularibus excitat axiomata, ascendendo continenter et gradatim, ut ultimo loco perveniatur ad maxime generalia ; quae via vera est, sed intentata.