An Introduction to Philosophical Inquiry: Contemporary and Classical SourcesJoseph Margolis |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 75
Page 36
... never been used before and that someone says ' When Jones sees a rabbit , has an illusion of a rabbit , has an hallucination of a rabbit , dreams of a rabbit , he has a sense - datum of rabbit ' . One cannot protest that this is false ...
... never been used before and that someone says ' When Jones sees a rabbit , has an illusion of a rabbit , has an hallucination of a rabbit , dreams of a rabbit , he has a sense - datum of rabbit ' . One cannot protest that this is false ...
Page 315
... never recognise the difference between the rational and the irrational utterances issuing from other human bodies , since he could never get access to the postulated immaterial causes of some of their utterances . Save for the doubtful ...
... never recognise the difference between the rational and the irrational utterances issuing from other human bodies , since he could never get access to the postulated immaterial causes of some of their utterances . Save for the doubtful ...
Page 382
... never be any question of assign- ing an experience , as such , to any subject other than oneself ; and therefore never any question of assigning it to oneself either , never any question of ascribing it to a subject at all . So the ...
... never be any question of assign- ing an experience , as such , to any subject other than oneself ; and therefore never any question of assigning it to oneself either , never any question of ascribing it to a subject at all . So the ...
Contents
PHILOSOPHICAL PERPLEXITY | 33 |
INTRODUCTION | 44 |
Religious Disputes | 99 |
Copyright | |
59 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. J. Ayer action analysis analytic answer argument ascribe assertion behaviour believe body called causal cause certainly character colour conceived concept consider definition denoting Descartes described distinction doubt effect empirical entity evidence evil example existence experience explanandum explanation expression fact false feel follows give given hand happen human Hylas idea identity implies inductive inference kind king of France knowledge language logical machine material thing mathematics matter meaning merely mind moral responsibility natural law necessary nominatum notion object observation occur P. F. Strawson pain particular perceived person Philonous philosophical phrase physical possible predicate pretending principle priori problem problem of evil proposition question reality reason reference regard relation Reply Obj seems sensations sense sense-data sentence someone sort soul speak statement suppose synonymy synthetic proposition theory thought Thrasymachus tion true truth Turing machine understand verified words