A Manual of the History of PhilosophyBell & Daldy, 1870 - 532 pages |
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Page xiii
... regarded as both external and internal ; because , 1st . They stand in connection with chronology , as successive or contemporaneous events . 2dly . They have their external effects and causes . 3dly . They have their origin in the con ...
... regarded as both external and internal ; because , 1st . They stand in connection with chronology , as successive or contemporaneous events . 2dly . They have their external effects and causes . 3dly . They have their origin in the con ...
Page 27
... regarded as obsolete and inconclusive by those who are familiar with the systems of Fichte , Schelling , and Hegel . The Identity Philosophy ( Identitäts lehre ) of Schelling and Hegel's Pantheistic Idealism , by identifying the Subject ...
... regarded as obsolete and inconclusive by those who are familiar with the systems of Fichte , Schelling , and Hegel . The Identity Philosophy ( Identitäts lehre ) of Schelling and Hegel's Pantheistic Idealism , by identifying the Subject ...
Page 37
... regarded as an absolute Unity escaping the grasp of the human understanding . Originally , he reposed in the con- templation of himself ; subsequently , his creative word has caused all things to proceed from him , by a succession of ...
... regarded as an absolute Unity escaping the grasp of the human understanding . Originally , he reposed in the con- templation of himself ; subsequently , his creative word has caused all things to proceed from him , by a succession of ...
Page 51
... regarded by succeeding ages as models , as well for their spirit of research and investiga tion , as for the results to which these have led , both in the manner and the matter of their philosophical inquiries ; but E 2 77 78. ] 51 PART ...
... regarded by succeeding ages as models , as well for their spirit of research and investiga tion , as for the results to which these have led , both in the manner and the matter of their philosophical inquiries ; but E 2 77 78. ] 51 PART ...
Page 67
... regarded as the condition of humanity . Xenophanes was the first to set the example of a philosopher who divested the Deity of the unworthy images under which he had been represented . 3 Parmenides . Fragments of his Poem Tepi púσews ...
... regarded as the condition of humanity . Xenophanes was the first to set the example of a philosopher who divested the Deity of the unworthy images under which he had been represented . 3 Parmenides . Fragments of his Poem Tepi púσews ...
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Absolute according Amst Anaxagoras ancient ARIST Aristotle Atheism Aufl Berl Berlin born character CHPH Christian cognition consequence Deity Descartes died DIOG disciple Diss Dissertation Divine doctrine Dogmatism ebend edition Empedocles endeavoured Epicurus Essay existence external faculty fasc Fichte flourished Francf German Geschichte Gött Götting Greeks Halle Hamb Hist History of Philosophy human ibid ideas Jena Kant knowledge LAERT latter laws Leibnitz Leips Leipz libb Lips Logic Lond Lugd Malebranche Math MEINERS Metaph Metaphysics mind moral mystical Nature notions object Opera opinions original Paris Parmenides Philos Phys Plato Platonis Plotinus PLUTARCH præs principles professor Pythagoras quæ Quæst rational Reason Religion Scepticism Schelling SEXT SEXTUS sive Socrates sophy soul speculative Spinoza spirit Stoics Theology theory things thought tion Translated treatises truth Ueber unity universal views virtue Vitâ Viteb vols XENOPH Xenophanes
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.
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