Philosophical Works, Volume 1Dover Publications, 1955 - Philosophy |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 53
Page 147
... deceive myself , it would also appear to be contrary to His goodness to permit me to be sometimes deceived , and nevertheless I cannot doubt that He does permit this . There may indeed be those who would prefer to deny the existence of ...
... deceive myself , it would also appear to be contrary to His goodness to permit me to be sometimes deceived , and nevertheless I cannot doubt that He does permit this . There may indeed be those who would prefer to deny the existence of ...
Page 184
... deceive myself even in those matters which I believe myself to apprehend with the greatest evidence and certainty ... deceived in the judgment whose grounds I know clearly . Will it be said that I formerly held many things to be true ...
... deceive myself even in those matters which I believe myself to apprehend with the greatest evidence and certainty ... deceived in the judgment whose grounds I know clearly . Will it be said that I formerly held many things to be true ...
Page 220
... deceived us , and that prudence directs us not to trust too much in what has even once deceived us : in the second place because in sleep we continually seem to feel or imagine innumerable things which have no existence . To those who ...
... deceived us , and that prudence directs us not to trust too much in what has even once deceived us : in the second place because in sleep we continually seem to feel or imagine innumerable things which have no existence . To those who ...
Contents
Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason | 81 |
Index | 451 |
CONCLUSIONS 1 | 1 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. K. Coomaraswamy action administration Aristotle arteries ARTICLE attribute believe blood body brain C. I. Lewis cause chiliagon college and university conceive concept consider contrary corporeal corporeal substance deduced depend Descartes desire difficulty Dioptrics discover distinct diverse doubt effect elemen elementary principals elementary school principals Epistemon error esteem Eudoxus evil excited exist experience extension fact faculty feel figure follow heart idea imagination inasmuch inservice judge judgment knowledge Leibniz less likewise magnitude mathematics matter Max Born means method mind mode motion movement nature nerves never objects observe opinions ourselves Paperbound passions perceive perceptions perfect philosophy Polyander possess present principalship problems proceed programs reason received recognise regard regions relation RENÉ DESCARTES represent responses role sadness school district sciences sensations senses soul spleen substance T. L. Heath teachers teaching things thought tion true truth understanding Upanishads