A Critical History of Philosophy, Volume 2E. Stock, 1889 |
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Pagina 108
... valid knowledge . Nor does anyone doubt that knowledge implies the existence of a faculty of knowledge , on the one hand , and objects so correlated to said faculty on the other , that when the proper conditions are fulfilled , real ...
... valid knowledge . Nor does anyone doubt that knowledge implies the existence of a faculty of knowledge , on the one hand , and objects so correlated to said faculty on the other , that when the proper conditions are fulfilled , real ...
Pagina 143
... valid knowledge , in any form , is a synthesis of being and knowing , ' that is , that the subject and object of knowledge must be one and identical , and thus come under the principle A = A. ' The first has all the characteristics of a ...
... valid knowledge , in any form , is a synthesis of being and knowing , ' that is , that the subject and object of knowledge must be one and identical , and thus come under the principle A = A. ' The first has all the characteristics of a ...
Pagina 424
... validity of which we can have a greater certainty than we do and must have of our knowledge of these realities . By every criteria , therefore , by which valid can be distinguished from invalid apprehensions and convic- tions , we are ...
... validity of which we can have a greater certainty than we do and must have of our knowledge of these realities . By every criteria , therefore , by which valid can be distinguished from invalid apprehensions and convic- tions , we are ...
Inhoudsopgave
CONTENTS | 1 |
Distinguishing Characteristics of Necessary Principles | 7 |
Method of Refuting Objections or the Forms in which they may be Refuted | 19 |
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absolutely conscious absolutely infinite absurd according according to Spencer adduced admit affirms appear apprehensions argument assumption basis cause common conceive conception conscious facts consciousness consequently contradiction demonstrated Descartes determine distinct doctrine dogma elements equally error example exclusive existence external faculty false Fichte finite force former fundamental Gautama Buddha Hegel Huxley hypothesis Idealism ideas identical immutable implied induction and deduction infinite Intelligence intuition judgments Kant known logical material matter mental mind motion nature necessary truth nescience neurine Not-self object origin palpable Pantheism perceived perception phenomena Philosophy Plato possible posteriori present principles priori privileged spirits problem of universal proof proposition protoplasm realities reason regard relations religion represented says Scepticism Schelling schools scientific self-contradictory sensation space specific Spencer sphere Subjective Idealism substance term Theism theory things thinkers thought tion Transmutation of Species true ultimate undeniably universal Universal Intelligence unknown utterly verified