An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Seven Philosophical Problems |
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Page 180
... judgment . In judgment the mind takes its ideas to agree or disagree ( or , which is the same , any proposition to be true or false ) without perceiving a demonstrative evidence in the proofs . The mind sometimes exercises this judgment ...
... judgment . In judgment the mind takes its ideas to agree or disagree ( or , which is the same , any proposition to be true or false ) without perceiving a demonstrative evidence in the proofs . The mind sometimes exercises this judgment ...
Page 536
... judgment of the work in abeyance ; and if we do happen to know what it was like , we should not let this sway our judgment of the work of art . But there are times when we seem to invoke the process as a criterion of judgment , and ...
... judgment of the work in abeyance ; and if we do happen to know what it was like , we should not let this sway our judgment of the work of art . But there are times when we seem to invoke the process as a criterion of judgment , and ...
Page 537
... judgment of his work ? It would alter our judgment about the author , surely ; it would change our judgment about the author's sincerity , and it would probably make us attribute to the author much more ingenuity than we now attribute ...
... judgment of his work ? It would alter our judgment about the author , surely ; it would change our judgment about the author's sincerity , and it would probably make us attribute to the author much more ingenuity than we now attribute ...
Contents
AN INTRODUCTION | 2 |
A Metaphysical Problem | 90 |
An Epistemological Problem | 169 |
Copyright | |
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action answer appear argument artist become begins believe body called cause claim common conception concerning connection consider criticism definition distinction doubt duty effect emotion ethical evidence evil example existence experience expression fact feeling force freedom give given grounds hand happiness human ideas important individual interests judgment Kant kind knowledge limited live material matter means metaphysics mind moral nature necessary never Note notion object organized original person philosophy political position possible present presuppositions principle problem production Professor proposition qualities question rational reality reason reference relation result rule sense social society spirit statement suppose theory things thought tion true truth turn understand universal whole