Basic Problems of Philosophy: Selected ReadingsDaniel J. Bronstein, Yervant Hovhannes Krikorian, Philip Paul Wiener |
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Page 248
... intuition . We shall return later to this important point . Let it suffice us for the mo- ment to have shown that our duration can be presented to us directly in an intuition , that it can be suggested to us indirectly by images , but ...
... intuition . We shall return later to this important point . Let it suffice us for the mo- ment to have shown that our duration can be presented to us directly in an intuition , that it can be suggested to us indirectly by images , but ...
Page 429
... intuition ; the intellectual aspect to concept- formation . Art belongs to the realm of intuition . For Croce art is intuition , and intuition includes all that is concrete and im- mediate in experience . Intuition involves sense - data ...
... intuition ; the intellectual aspect to concept- formation . Art belongs to the realm of intuition . For Croce art is intuition , and intuition includes all that is concrete and im- mediate in experience . Intuition involves sense - data ...
Page 462
... intuition , then , is always lyrical intuition : this latter being a word that is not present as an adjective or definition of the first , but as a synonym , another of the synonyms that can be united to the several that I have ...
... intuition , then , is always lyrical intuition : this latter being a word that is not present as an adjective or definition of the first , but as a synonym , another of the synonyms that can be united to the several that I have ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 1 |
On the Improvement of the Understanding Benedict | 30 |
INTRODUCTION | 68 |
Copyright | |
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absolute abstract action aesthetic Archelaus argument Aristotle attain axioms beauty become believe body bourgeoisie called causal cause certainly Charles Peirce common sense conception conclusion Democritus desire divine doctrine doubt ence epistemology essence ethical evil existence experience external fact faith fallibilism feeling freedom give Hegel human hypothesis ideal ideas imagination individual inference intellectual intuition kind knowledge less liberty logical logical positivists Marxist mathematical mathematical physics matter means ment merely metaphysical method mind moral nature never nominalists notion object observed opinion particular passions perceive perception person philosophy philosophy of science physical Plato political Polus possible present principle problem proletariat proposition qualities question reality reason regard relation religion religious result scientific scientific method simple social Socrates soul Spinoza spirit suppose Theism theology theory things thought tion true truth understanding universe whole words