An Anthology of Modern Philosophy: Selections for Beginners from the Writings of the Greatest Philosophers from 1500 to 1900, with Biographical Sketches, Analyses, Diagrams and Questions for DiscussionDaniel Sommer Robinson |
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Page 310
... understanding , I call SENSATION . Secondly , the other fountain , from which experience fur- nisheth the understanding with ideas , is the perception of the operations of our own mind within us , as it is employed about the ideas it ...
... understanding , I call SENSATION . Secondly , the other fountain , from which experience fur- nisheth the understanding with ideas , is the perception of the operations of our own mind within us , as it is employed about the ideas it ...
Page 502
... UNDERSTANDING , REASON AND JUDGMENT ( Translated by J. H. Bernard ) Introduction and Analysis This selection is from J. H. Bernard's translation of Kant's Kritik of Judgment , pp . 1-2 and 16-19 , reprinted by permission of Macmillan ...
... UNDERSTANDING , REASON AND JUDGMENT ( Translated by J. H. Bernard ) Introduction and Analysis This selection is from J. H. Bernard's translation of Kant's Kritik of Judgment , pp . 1-2 and 16-19 , reprinted by permission of Macmillan ...
Page 785
... understanding which is only another faculty of the same subject , there is a community which is regulated a priori by certain laws ; and this without denying the necessary depend- ence of the sensibility for its affections upon outward ...
... understanding which is only another faculty of the same subject , there is a community which is regulated a priori by certain laws ; and this without denying the necessary depend- ence of the sensibility for its affections upon outward ...
Contents
PARACELSUS THE GREAT | 3 |
GIORDANO BRUNO | 24 |
TOMMASO CAMPANELLA | 59 |
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absolutely infinite accident according action Analysis This selection animal argument Aristes Aristotle atheist axioms believe body Bruno burning-glass called cause centre colours conceived consider created things creatures Democritus Descartes desire distinct divers divine doubt earth effect elements essence eternal exist experience extension false finite follow force give gland heat heaven Hence human ideas Idols imagination infinite infinity Introduction and Analysis intuitive knowledge kind knowledge laws Leibniz light likewise living Lucretius Malebranche manner matter means metaphysics mind monad motion move mover Mystery namely natural philosophy natural theology nature necessary objects opinions Paracelsus passions perceive perception perfect phantasms philosophy principle produced Professor James Hall Prop prove qualities reality reason received sciences sense sensible separation simple soul space speak spirits stars substance suppose tasm Theodore thought tion touch true truth understanding universe whole words