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" ... all our reasonings concerning causes and effects are derived from nothing but custom, and that belief is more properly an act of the sensitive than of the cogitative part of our natures. "
The Works of Dugald Stewart: Dissertation exhibiting a general view of the ... - Pagina 400
door Dugald Stewart - 1829
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The Intellectual repository for the New Church. (July/Sept. 1817 ...

New Church gen. confer - 1874 - 608 pagina’s
...when he had argued himself into the conviction that mind as well as matter was a figment, and that belief is more -properly an act of the sensitive than of the cogitative part of our nature — intellect with him being only a succession of impressions and ideas. "I am affrighted and...
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The Works of Thomas Reid ...: With Account of His Life and Writings, Volume 3

Thomas Reid - 1815 - 434 pagina’s
...but a manifest truth ; though I conecive it to be very improperly expressed, by saying, that belicf is more properly an act of the sensitive than of the cogitative part of our nature. ESSAY VIII. » OP TASTE. CHAP. I. Of TASTE IN GENERAL THAT power of the mind by which we are...
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The Works of Thomas Reid; with an Account of His Life and Writings, Volume 3

Thomas Reid - 1822 - 322 pagina’s
...the last step in this progress, and crowned the system by what he calls his hypothesis ; to wit, that belief is more properly an act of the sensitive, than of the cogitative part of our nature. Beyond this, 1 think no man can go in this track ; sensation or feeling is all, and what is...
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A Search of Truth in the Science of the Human Mind, Part First, Volume 1

Frederick Beasley - 1822 - 584 pagina’s
...asserts, that all our reasonings concerning causes and effects, are derived from nothing but custom; and belief is more properly an act of the sensitive, than of the cogitative part of our nature. Finally, to hasten to the conclusion of this list of absurdities, he asserts, that the doctrine...
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The Philosophical Works of David Hume ...

David Hume - 1826 - 508 pagina’s
...that all our reasonings concerning causes and effects, are derived from nothing but custom ; and that belief is more properly an act of the sensitive, than of the cogitative part of our natures. I have here proved, that the very same principles, which make us form a decision upon any subject,...
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Essays on the Powers of the Human Mind: To which are Added, An Essay on ...

Thomas Reid - 1827 - 706 pagina’s
...the last step in this progress, and crowned the system by what he calls his hypothesis, to wit, that belief is more properly an act of the sensitive than of the cogitative part of our nature. Beyond this I think no man can go in this track ; sensation or feeling is all ; and what is...
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The Works of Dugald Stewart: Dissertation exhibiting a general view of the ...

Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 518 pagina’s
...also a cause of existence. That proposition, therefore, is not intuitively certain. At least, any one who would assert it to be intuitively certain, must...remind my readers) makes a great figure in the works of Cudworth and of Kant. By the former it was avowedly borrowed from the philosophy of Plato. To the latter,...
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The Works of Dugald Stewart: Dissertation exhibiting a general view of the ...

Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 518 pagina’s
...cause to every new production, neither from demonstration nor from intuition," he boldly coneludes, that " this opinion must necessarily arise from observation...the cogitative part of our natures." (Ibid. p. 321.) latter, it is not improbable, that it may have been suggested by this passage in Hume. Without disputing...
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Essays on the Active Powers of the Human Mind: An ..., Volume 1;Volume 1843

Thomas Reid, Dugald Stewart - 1843 - 632 pagina’s
...the last step in this progress, and crowned the system by what he calls his hypothesis, to wit, That belief is more properly an act of the sensitive, than of the cogitative part of our nature. Beyond this I think no man can go in this track ; sensation or feeling is all, and what is...
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The works of Thomas Reid, with selections from his unpublished letters ...

Thomas Reid - 1846 - 1080 pagina’s
...indeed, is built upon it ; and it is of itself sufficient to prove what he calls his hypothesis, " that belief is more properly an act of the sensitive than of the cogitative part of our natures." It is very difficult to examine this account of belief with the same gravity with which it is proposed....
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