A Manual of the History of PhilosophyH. G. Bohn, 1852 - 532 pages |
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Page vii
... object presented by Sensational and Intuitional Perception . Gefühl has been translated Emotion and Feeling . Wissen . Science ; sometimes Knowledge , but never Cognition . A marked feature of Kant's , and indeed of all modern German ...
... object presented by Sensational and Intuitional Perception . Gefühl has been translated Emotion and Feeling . Wissen . Science ; sometimes Knowledge , but never Cognition . A marked feature of Kant's , and indeed of all modern German ...
Page 3
... object , to the extensive ap- plication and intensive force of the philosophizing energy , to internal aims and motives ( noble or interested ) as also to external causes and occasions . This material comprises , secondly ; the products ...
... object , to the extensive ap- plication and intensive force of the philosophizing energy , to internal aims and motives ( noble or interested ) as also to external causes and occasions . This material comprises , secondly ; the products ...
Page 5
... object ought to be thoroughly to explore , through its con- tinual alternations of improvement and declension , the pro- gress of a philosophic spirit , and the gradual development of philosophy as a science . This end cannot be ...
... object ought to be thoroughly to explore , through its con- tinual alternations of improvement and declension , the pro- gress of a philosophic spirit , and the gradual development of philosophy as a science . This end cannot be ...
Page 9
... object of inquiry ; ( the system of ethnography , or partial histories of particular nations opposing itself to anything like a precise limitation , ) and even yet there is nothing satis- factorily determined on this point ; only ...
... object of inquiry ; ( the system of ethnography , or partial histories of particular nations opposing itself to anything like a precise limitation , ) and even yet there is nothing satis- factorily determined on this point ; only ...
Page 11
... object and end of the understanding ( § 3 ) . Observation . The particular ends contemplated in such a work may justify a certain diversity in the manner and method of it ; and may help to resolve the question ( according to ...
... object and end of the understanding ( § 3 ) . Observation . The particular ends contemplated in such a work may justify a certain diversity in the manner and method of it ; and may help to resolve the question ( according to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acad Amst Anaxagoras ancient ARIST Aristotelian Aristotle Athens Born causes century character CHPH Christian Commentaries consequence Cyrenaics Deity Descartes died DIOG Diogenes Laertius disciple Diss Dissert distinguished Divine doctrines Dogmatism edition endeavoured Epicurus Essay Ethics existence external fasc Flourished Francf Geschichte Gött Götting Greeks Hist History of Philosophy human Ibid ideas inquiries knowledge LAERT latter Leibnitz Leips libb Lips Logic Lond Lugd Math MEINERS Metaph Metaphysics mind moral mystical nature Neoplatonism notions object Opera opinions original Paris perfect Philos Phys Plato Platonis Plotinus PLUTARCH præs principles Progr Pyrrho Pythagoras quæ Quæst rational reason religion respecting Scepticism SEXT SEXTUS Sextus Empiricus sive Socrates soul speculative spirit Stilpo Stoics surnamed Theology theory things thought tion translated treatises truth Unity universal VIII virtue Vita Viteb vols XENOPH Xenophanes Zeno τὸ
Popular passages
Page 370 - Thou art, of what sort the eternal life of the saints was to be, which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive.
Page 492 - Théorie du pouvoir politique et religieux dans la société civile, démontrée par le raisonnement et par l'histoire, par M.
Page 159 - But a strange thing happens : the great works of the thinkers and poets, penetrated with admiration for the classics, are in the vulgar tongue ; and the same phenomenon occurs, at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth centuries, in all the countries of lettered Europe.
Page 486 - Faculties which perceive the relations of external objects : 27, Locality ; 28, Number ; 29, Order; 30, Eventuality ; 31, Time ; 32, Tune ; 33, Language.
Page 274 - He was born at Nola, in the kingdom of Naples, about the middle of the sixteenth century. Little is known of his early life. He professed himself a Dominican, but the year and place of his noviciate are not known.
Page 370 - ... out repeated refusals every time he was importuned by the President and his Cabinet ; hence the latter said he consented. But they were the ones who misrepresented, and not he. If anyone chooses to believe a lie because Mr. Durkee holds his tongue, the latter is not to blame. He is as " wise as a serpent, and as harmless as a dove," and always truthful, when he opens his mouth.
Page 492 - Essai analytique sur les lois naturelles de l'ordre social ou, du pouvoir, du ministre et du sujet dans la société, 1800.
Page 331 - A letter to the learned Mr. Henry Dodwell, containing some remarks on a pretended demonstration of the immateriality and natural immortality of the soul, in Mr.
Page 371 - Observations on Man, his Frame, his Duty, and his Expectations, in two parts.
Page 331 - A Letter to Mr Dodwell; wherein all the Arguments in his Epistolary Discourse against the Immortality of the Soul are particularly answered, and the Judgment of the Fathers concerning that Matter truly represented.