Toward a New Sensibility: Essays of O.K. Bouwsma |
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Page 173
... stone must be a large one nor that one must strike it with a mighty force nor that one must in such a case suffer a rebound . We may allow that the largeness of the stone and the mighty force and the rebound were rhetorical ...
... stone must be a large one nor that one must strike it with a mighty force nor that one must in such a case suffer a rebound . We may allow that the largeness of the stone and the mighty force and the rebound were rhetorical ...
Page 174
... stone . This , no doubt , in part accounts for the power of conviction expressed in the mighty force of the impact of his foot against the stone . The greater the rebound , the greater the conviction , since he knew what to expect . But ...
... stone . This , no doubt , in part accounts for the power of conviction expressed in the mighty force of the impact of his foot against the stone . The greater the rebound , the greater the conviction , since he knew what to expect . But ...
Page 178
... stone ( or football ) which is in the mind . The idea , of course , is that you must kick a stone which is in the mind with a foot which is not in the mind , which is , to use Berkeley's phrase " without the mind . " If it now be said ...
... stone ( or football ) which is in the mind . The idea , of course , is that you must kick a stone which is in the mind with a foot which is not in the mind , which is , to use Berkeley's phrase " without the mind . " If it now be said ...
Contents
Makes It True | 119 |
Remarks on the Cogito | 137 |
Notes on Berkeleys Idealism | 171 |
Copyright | |
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Achaeans Achilles aesthetician Allaire analogy Anaximenes answer apple believe Berkeley Berkeley's bird Bouwsma certainly concept confusion connection convinced course dead dog lying deceiver Descartes Diotima discover Don Quixote doubt Dreams are illusions exist explain expression eyes feel foot fractions goes golden bowl grammar hand hear heard ideas imprinted imagine interest intuitive knowledge Johnson kick a stone language language-game look meaning mind mistake mouse never noise notice nursery rhymes odor one's ostensive definition overtake the tortoise paper Patroclus perhaps philosophical Philosophical Investigations Plato poet poetry ptarmigan question read a poem refutation remember remind Ryle Samuel Johnson seems sensations sense sentence smell Socrates someone sort speak statement strange street suggest suppose talk tell theory things thought I saw tion true truth understand whale Wishes are horses wishes were horses Wittgenstein word izba write
References to this book
Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis Charles R. Elder Limited preview - 2010 |
Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis Charles R. Elder Limited preview - 2010 |