Philosophical Works, Volume 1Cambridge Press, 1967 - Philosophy |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 32
Page 242
... attributes . PRINCIPLE LVII . That there are attributes which pertain to things and others to thought ; and what duration and time are . Some of the attributes are in things themselves and others are only in our thought . Thus time ...
... attributes . PRINCIPLE LVII . That there are attributes which pertain to things and others to thought ; and what duration and time are . Some of the attributes are in things themselves and others are only in our thought . Thus time ...
Page 245
... attribute ; or we cannot have a clear idea of the one of the two attributes if we separate from it the other . For example , because there is no substance which does not cease to exist when it ceases to endure , duration is only ...
... attribute ; or we cannot have a clear idea of the one of the two attributes if we separate from it the other . For example , because there is no substance which does not cease to exist when it ceases to endure , duration is only ...
Page 436
... attributes are not mutually opposed , but diverse ' . ' In these words again there is a contradiction , for when the question concerns attributes that constitute the essence of substances , there can be no greater opposition between ...
... attributes are not mutually opposed , but diverse ' . ' In these words again there is a contradiction , for when the question concerns attributes that constitute the essence of substances , there can be no greater opposition between ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action animal spirits appear Aristotle arteries ARTICLE attribute believe blood body brain cause celestial matter certainly chiliagon clearly and distinctly colour conceive conclusion consider contrary corporeal corporeal substance deceived deduced Democritus depend Descartes desire difficulty Dioptrics Discourse on Method discover diverse doubt earth easily effect Epistemon error esteem Eudoxus evil excited exist existence of God explained extension fact faculty false fear feel figure fixed stars follow hatred heart heat human hypotenuse idea imagination inasmuch judge judgment knowledge Leibniz less likewise magnitude matter means mind mode motion move movement muscles nature nerves never objects observe opinions optic nerves ourselves pass passions perceive perceptions perfect persuade pertain philosophy Polyander possess present PRINCIPLE PRINCIPLES OF PHILOSOPHY proceed rarefaction reason recognise regard rule sadness sciences sensations senses soul speak species spleen substance sufficient things thought true truth understanding veins whole