An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Six Philosophical Problems |
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Page 116
... organ is pressed , it no sooner yields but the next part within it is pressed also . In this manner the pressure or motion is propagated through all the parts of the organ to the innermost . Also , the pressure of the uttermost part ...
... organ is pressed , it no sooner yields but the next part within it is pressed also . In this manner the pressure or motion is propagated through all the parts of the organ to the innermost . Also , the pressure of the uttermost part ...
Page 117
... organ ? " His answer is as ingenious as his question : Why doth the sensation appear as something situated without the organ ? It is thus : There is in the whole organ , by reason of its own internal natural action some reaction against ...
... organ ? " His answer is as ingenious as his question : Why doth the sensation appear as something situated without the organ ? It is thus : There is in the whole organ , by reason of its own internal natural action some reaction against ...
Page 249
... organs , can- not succeed . The mind may observe all phenomena but its own . There can be nothing like scientific observation of mental phenomena except from without , and by another . The observing and observed organ are here the same ...
... organs , can- not succeed . The mind may observe all phenomena but its own . There can be nothing like scientific observation of mental phenomena except from without , and by another . The observing and observed organ are here the same ...
Contents
AN ACCOUNT OF THIS BOOK | 1 |
A METAPHYSICAL PROBLEM | 8 |
from George | 123 |
Copyright | |
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