An Anthology of Modern Philosophy: Selections for Beginners from the Writings of the Greatest Philosophers from 1500 to 1900, with Biographical Sketches, Analyses, Diagrams and Questions for DiscussionDaniel Sommer Robinson |
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Page 24
... arguments are beautiful examples of scholastic reasoning . ( The student should state each argument briefly in his own words . ) III . Filoteo's Refutation and New Philosophy . Filoteo takes up each argument of Albertino , refutes it ...
... arguments are beautiful examples of scholastic reasoning . ( The student should state each argument briefly in his own words . ) III . Filoteo's Refutation and New Philosophy . Filoteo takes up each argument of Albertino , refutes it ...
Page 334
... argument for God , I have appended to the paper on Descartes . It is from the miscellaneous papers , pp . 317 f . of Lord King's Life , etc. Locke , having long been suspicious of Descartes's celebrated onto- logical argument for God ...
... argument for God , I have appended to the paper on Descartes . It is from the miscellaneous papers , pp . 317 f . of Lord King's Life , etc. Locke , having long been suspicious of Descartes's celebrated onto- logical argument for God ...
Page 374
... argument , which infers a designer or supreme architect of the universe from the beauty and harmony of nature . Discuss Royce's statement and try to answer it by showing wherein Berkeley's argument is really new . 4. State an objection ...
... argument , which infers a designer or supreme architect of the universe from the beauty and harmony of nature . Discuss Royce's statement and try to answer it by showing wherein Berkeley's argument is really new . 4. State an objection ...
Contents
PARACELSUS THE GREAT | 3 |
GIORDANO BRUNO | 24 |
TOMMASO CAMPANELLA | 59 |
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absolutely absolutely infinite according action Analysis This selection animal appear Aristes Aristotle axioms believe body burning-glass cause centre colours common conceived conception consider creatures Democritus Descartes determined distinct divers divine doubt earth effect elements essence eternal existence experience faculty finite follow force give heat heaven Hegel Hence human ideas Idols imagination infinite infinity Introduction and Analysis intuition intuitive knowledge judgment kind knowledge Leibniz light likewise living Malebranche manner matter means metaphysics mind monad moral motion move mover Mystery namely natural philosophy natural theology nature necessary never objects opinion Paracelsus passions perceive perception perfect phantasms philosophy possible principle priori produced Professor James Hall proof pure qualities reality reason relation sciences sensation sense sensible simple soul space Spinoza spirits stars substance suppose thought tion true truth understanding unity universe whole words