An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Seven Philosophical Problems |
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Page 109
... sense . The rest are derived from that original . As I said before , whatsoever we conceive , hath been perceived first by sense , either all at once or by parts . A man can have no thought representing anything , not subject to ...
... sense . The rest are derived from that original . As I said before , whatsoever we conceive , hath been perceived first by sense , either all at once or by parts . A man can have no thought representing anything , not subject to ...
Page 119
... sense . " What is ? What theory leads Hobbes to the conclusion that sense perception is sense de- ception ? 7. Are sense - organs best thought of as transformers or revealers ? 8. How Hobbes would correlate the distinction between ...
... sense . " What is ? What theory leads Hobbes to the conclusion that sense perception is sense de- ception ? 7. Are sense - organs best thought of as transformers or revealers ? 8. How Hobbes would correlate the distinction between ...
Page 128
... sense , which cannot exist unperceived , I shall readily grant that it is more conformable to custom that they should be called things rather than ideas . " I will still believe my senses and will never suffer any argument , how ...
... sense , which cannot exist unperceived , I shall readily grant that it is more conformable to custom that they should be called things rather than ideas . " I will still believe my senses and will never suffer any argument , how ...
Contents
AN INTRODUCTION | 2 |
A Metaphysical Problem | 90 |
An Epistemological Problem | 169 |
Copyright | |
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A. J. Ayer absolute presuppositions action aesthetic agnosticism answer appear argue argument artist believe bourgeois bourgeoisie called capitalist cause citations claim conception criticism David Hume distinction doctrine duty emotion Emotivism essay ethical evil existence experience expression fact feeling fictions force freedom G. E. Moore happiness Hegel Hobbes human Hume hypothesis ideas Immanuel Kant individual intrinsic John Stuart Mill judgment Kant Kant's kind knowledge logical Marx material matter means metaphysics mind modern moral natural theology naturalistic fallacy nature necessary Nietzsche notion object Pascal perceived person philosophy political possible principle priori problem production Professor proletariat proposition qualities R. G. Collingwood rational READING QUESTIONS reality reason religion Schopenhauer sense skepticism social society sovereign sovereignty spirit suppose T. H. Huxley theism theology theory things thought tion true truth universal whole words