An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Six Philosophical Problems |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 92
Page 188
If any ideas are genuinely innate , one would expect very young children to be in conscious possession of them . ( 3 ) Many ideas for which innateness is claimed are not known till the person " comes to the use of reason .
If any ideas are genuinely innate , one would expect very young children to be in conscious possession of them . ( 3 ) Many ideas for which innateness is claimed are not known till the person " comes to the use of reason .
Page 190
Highly condensed , it comes to the following : - Considered with reference to their origin , ideas come to the mind either by way of sensation or reflection , or a combina- tion of the two . From sensation , the mind gets ideas of the ...
Highly condensed , it comes to the following : - Considered with reference to their origin , ideas come to the mind either by way of sensation or reflection , or a combina- tion of the two . From sensation , the mind gets ideas of the ...
Page 204
The premises of his theory of knowledge are to be the following : We may divide all perceptions into two classes : impressions and ideas . By impressions I mean all our perceptions when we hear , see , feel , love , hate , desire , etc.
The premises of his theory of knowledge are to be the following : We may divide all perceptions into two classes : impressions and ideas . By impressions I mean all our perceptions when we hear , see , feel , love , hate , desire , etc.
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
AN ACCOUNT OF THIS BOOK | 1 |
A THEOLOGICAL PROBLEM | 8 |
8 | 24 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action answer appear argument become begins believe better body called cause civil claim conception concerning connection consider criticism direct distinction doubt duty effect evidence evil existence experience fact feel fiction follow force freedom give given grounds hand happiness human hypothesis ideas individual interest James Kant kind king knowledge limited live materialism matter means metaphysics mind morality namely nature necessary never notion objects obligation opinion organization origin perceived perfect persons philosophy political position possible present principle priori problem production qualities question rational reality reason reference regard relation religion representative requires rule sense skepticism social society spirit substance suppose theology theory things thought tion true truth turns understanding universe whole