History of the Philosophy of Mind: Embracing the Opinions of All Writers on Mental Science from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Bind 4,Del 2Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1850 |
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Side 392
... causes , gave up the contest in 1790 , after many civil contentions and bloody battles . Some years after , the saine kind of enterprise was undertaken by William , king of Holland , though from very different motives , and with a view ...
... causes , gave up the contest in 1790 , after many civil contentions and bloody battles . Some years after , the saine kind of enterprise was undertaken by William , king of Holland , though from very different motives , and with a view ...
Side 393
... causes of the Belgian Revolution of 1830 . There were , in addition to these circumstances just mentioned , other public events which greatly influenced the speculative philosophy of the Low Countries , in the latter part of the last ...
... causes of the Belgian Revolution of 1830 . There were , in addition to these circumstances just mentioned , other public events which greatly influenced the speculative philosophy of the Low Countries , in the latter part of the last ...
Side 395
... cause of philosophy ; and our only lament is that we should have so few published memorials of his remarkable acuteness and exten- sive information in this branch of human know- ledge . As the doctrines of Kant obtained a partial ...
... cause of philosophy ; and our only lament is that we should have so few published memorials of his remarkable acuteness and exten- sive information in this branch of human know- ledge . As the doctrines of Kant obtained a partial ...
Side 400
... abstract substance . Our author observes , " Matter is not that which I see ; it is only the cause of my sensations . It is • Essai , Entretien Second , pp . 20. 23. 32 . neither red , nor bluc , nor cold , nor 400 BISHOP NELIS .
... abstract substance . Our author observes , " Matter is not that which I see ; it is only the cause of my sensations . It is • Essai , Entretien Second , pp . 20. 23. 32 . neither red , nor bluc , nor cold , nor 400 BISHOP NELIS .
Side 408
... . Whatever theory we may adopt on the nature of mind in the ab- stract , we must still admit that it is under a con- siderable influence from material causes . This is apparent in every moment of our lives , and 408 NIEUPORT .
... . Whatever theory we may adopt on the nature of mind in the ab- stract , we must still admit that it is under a con- siderable influence from material causes . This is apparent in every moment of our lives , and 408 NIEUPORT .
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History of the Philosophy of Mind: Embracing the Opinions of All ..., Bind 1 Robert Blakey Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
History of the Philosophy of Mind: Embracing the Opinions of All ..., Bind 1 Robert Blakey Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abstract action active arguments Belgium body brain Brussels c'est cause century Chap ciples Condillac considerable considered Cours de philosophie Deity der Philosophie Descartes Dieu discases discussed Divine doctrines effect Essay être exercise existence external facts faculties fait feelings Geschichte der Philosophie Gröningen Hippocrates ideas idées influence inquiry intellectual judgment Kant knowledge l'homme l'humanité l'intelligence lative laws le monde Logic Logik logique losophy Louvain Magnétisme Animal matter Meenen mental philosophy mental science ments mesmeric metaphysical METAPHYSICAL WRITERS Metaphysik mind monde moral neral notions objects observations operations opinions organs Paris pensée peut phenomena Philo philoso PHILOSOPHY OF MIND phrenological phrenologists physical physiognomy physiology pia mater principles Professor Psychologie published qu'il raison rapports reader reason relation religion remarks sensation senses sensibilities sophie soul speculations Sweden temperaments theology theory thing thought tion tout treatise truth Ueber University University of Louvain volition volume
Populære passager
Side 600 - Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned? Can one go upon hot coals, and his feet not be burned?
Side 499 - Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or being his counsellor hath taught him ? With whom took he counsel, and who instructed him, and taught him in the path of judgment, and taught him knowledge, and shewed to him the way of understanding...
Side 492 - ... hundred, or a thousand degrees, and his strength not also increased, his strength will be wholly insufficient to surmount the difficulty. As therefore it must be allowed, that there may be such a thing as a sure and perfect connection between moral causes and effects ; so this only is what I call by the name of moral Necessity.
Side 498 - And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as nothing; and he doeth according to his will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay his hand, or say unto him, What doest thou?
Side 491 - Moral Necessity may be as absolute, as natural Necessity. That is, the effect may be as perfectly connected with its moral cause, as a natural necessary effect is with its natural cause.
Side 535 - Money, which represents the prose of life, and which is hardly spoken of in parlors without an apology, is, in its effects and laws, as beautiful as roses.
Side 554 - ... would then see equal reason to believe that mind might be superadded to life, as life is to structure. They would then indeed still farther perceive how mind and matter might reciprocally operate on each other by means of an intervening substance. Thus even would physiological researches enforce the...
Side 492 - ... are very strong, all will allow that there is some difficulty in going against them. And if they were yet stronger, the difficulty would be still greater. And, therefore, if more were still added to their strength, to a certain degree, it would make the difficulty so great, that it would be wholly impossible to surmount it; for this plain reason, because whatever power men may be supposed to have to surmount difficulties, yet that power is not infinite; and so goes not beyond certain limits.
Side 473 - ... to enable us to follow in the steps of nature ; since to attempt without it to approach and visit her in her sublime abode, would be to attempt to climb heaven by the Tower of Babel ; for the highest step must be approached by the intermediate...
Side 578 - Nay, are not the mischievous consequences which have actually been occasioned by the pretenders to animal magnetism, the strongest of all encouragements to attempt such an examination of the principles upon which the effects really depend, as may give to scientific practitioners the management of agents so peculiarly efficacious and overbearing ? Is not this mode of reasoning, perfectly analogous to that upon which medical inquirers are accustomed to proceed, when they discover any new substance...