Philosophical Works of James Frederick Ferrier: Philosophical remainsGarland Pub., 1980 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 91–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 221
... human weakness . Neither has human morality any positive character of its own ; it is nothing but the clear consciousness of human wickedness . The whole rudiments of morality are laid before us , if we will but admit the fact ( for ...
... human weakness . Neither has human morality any positive character of its own ; it is nothing but the clear consciousness of human wickedness . The whole rudiments of morality are laid before us , if we will but admit the fact ( for ...
Էջ 449
... human mind ; " Matter per se " is the objective part of the datum , the part of the datum which exists independently of the human mind . Metaphysic divides it at a dif- ferent point , " our apprehension of : " this , according to ...
... human mind ; " Matter per se " is the objective part of the datum , the part of the datum which exists independently of the human mind . Metaphysic divides it at a dif- ferent point , " our apprehension of : " this , according to ...
Էջ 528
... human mind fabricate for itself the idea of the beautiful and the idea of the sublime ? or do not rather these ideas fashion and fabricate the human mind ? Does man derive his poetical inspiration from himself ? or does he derive ...
... human mind fabricate for itself the idea of the beautiful and the idea of the sublime ? or do not rather these ideas fashion and fabricate the human mind ? Does man derive his poetical inspiration from himself ? or does he derive ...
Բովանդակություն
INTRODUCTION TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF CONSCI | 1 |
BERKELEY AND IDEALISM 1842 | 291 |
INTRODUCTORY LECTURE Nov 1856 | 463 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
2 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Common terms and phrases
absolute act of antagonism act of consciousness act of negation admitted altogether analysis answer appears Bailey become believe Berkeley Berkeley's BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE ception character cognition colour common sense conceive consequence creature distinction doctrine Dr Reid endeavour existence of matter external universe faculty Fichte Hegel hold human mind imagination innate ideas intellectual intelligence JAMES FREDERICK FERRIER knowledge law of causality maintain man's means merely metaphysical metaphysician modifications moral nature ness never notion observation opinion original ourselves passion perception of matter percipient pheno phenomena phenomenon philo philosophy present principle psychology question realisation reality reason regard render representationism retina scepticism and idealism Schelling sciousness seen sight Sir William Hamilton species speculative sphere Stoicism suppose tangible thee theory things thou thought tion touch true truth visible body visible objects vision visual sensations whole words