Basic Problems of Philosophy: Selected ReadingsDaniel J. Bronstein, Yervant Hovhannes Krikorian, Philip Paul Wiener |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 315
... produce diversification . That is a mathe- matical truth a proposition of analytical mechanics ; and anybody can see without any algebraical apparatus that mechanical law out of like antecedents can only produce like consequents . It is ...
... produce diversification . That is a mathe- matical truth a proposition of analytical mechanics ; and anybody can see without any algebraical apparatus that mechanical law out of like antecedents can only produce like consequents . It is ...
Page 381
... produce that reasoning . The connexion between these prop- ositions is not intuitive . There is required a medium , which may enable the mind to draw such an inference , if indeed it be drawn by reasoning and argument . What that medium ...
... produce that reasoning . The connexion between these prop- ositions is not intuitive . There is required a medium , which may enable the mind to draw such an inference , if indeed it be drawn by reasoning and argument . What that medium ...
Page 492
... produce something so inferior to itself , reverting in its expression to material being , so that its witnesses seem so many fossils with which it strews its path ? What we call museums - mausoleums , rather , in which a dead art heaps ...
... produce something so inferior to itself , reverting in its expression to material being , so that its witnesses seem so many fossils with which it strews its path ? What we call museums - mausoleums , rather , in which a dead art heaps ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolute action aesthetic Alcetas Archelaus Aristotle attain axioms beauty become believe body bourgeois bourgeoisie called cause Cleanthes common conception consequences desire Dewey divine doctrine doubt effect ence epistemology eral essence ethical evil existence experience external fact fallibilism feeling freedom G. P. Putnam's Sons happiness Hegel human idea ideal imagination individual intellectual interest intuition JOHN DEWEY judgment kind knowledge liberty living logical Marxist matter means ment merely metaphysical method mind moral nature never nomic notion object observation opinion particular passions perceive perception person philosophy physical Plato pleasure political Polus possible present principle problem proletariat qualities question rational reality reason regard relation religion religious scientific scientific method sense simple social society Socrates soul spirit suppose tariat Theism theology theory things thought Thrasymachus tion true truth understanding universal whole words