The Philosophical Works of Descartes: Rendered Into English, Volume 2Dover Publications, 1934 - Enlightenment |
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Page 22
... complete beings . This is sufficient to cause one thing to be conceived separately and as distinct from another by the abstracting action of a mind when it conceives the thing inadequately , without sufficing to cause two things to be ...
... complete beings . This is sufficient to cause one thing to be conceived separately and as distinct from another by the abstracting action of a mind when it conceives the thing inadequately , without sufficing to cause two things to be ...
Page 98
... complete manner , I meant not that the intellectual operation must be adequate , but merely that we must have a knowledge of the thing sufficient to let us know that it is complete . I thought this had been sufficiently plain from ...
... complete manner , I meant not that the intellectual operation must be adequate , but merely that we must have a knowledge of the thing sufficient to let us know that it is complete . I thought this had been sufficiently plain from ...
Page 99
... complete substance . Quite in the same way mind and body are incomplete substances viewed in relation to the man who is the unity which together they form ; but , taken alone , they are complete . For , as to be extended , divisible ...
... complete substance . Quite in the same way mind and body are incomplete substances viewed in relation to the man who is the unity which together they form ; but , taken alone , they are complete . For , as to be extended , divisible ...
Contents
Reply to the First Objections | 9 |
Second Set of Objections | 24 |
Reply to Second Objections | 30 |
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A. K. Coomaraswamy accidents admit affirm afterwards angles animal appear apprehend Architect argument Aristotle assert attributes belongs brutes certainly Chiliagon clear and distinct clearly and distinctly Clothbound comprehend conceived concept conclusion contained contrary corporeal critic deceived demonstrated deny derived Descartes Discourse on Method distinguished doubt dreaming efficient cause employ error essence eternal everything evident existence of God fact faculty false figure follow formal formal cause give hence human Ibid idea imagination infer infinite intellect J. B. Bury judge judgment knowledge likewise LISTEN & LEARN matter means Meditation merely method mind motion Myriagon nature never nevertheless objective reality opinions Paperbound perceive perfect philosophy Plato possess principles proof prove question reason refute reply seems sense soul spirit sub fin sufficient syllogism theologians thing which thinks thinking substance thinking thing thought triangle true truth understand unless Whence whole wholly wish words