| David Hume - 1817 - 528 pàgines
...colour, weight, and consistence of bread ; but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body. Sight or feeling conveys an idea of the actual motion of bodies ; but as to that wonderful force or... | |
| David Hume - 1826 - 626 pàgines
...colour, weight, and consistence of bread ; but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body. Sight or feeling conveys an idea of the actual motion of bodies, but as to that wonderful force or... | |
| David Hume - 1854 - 576 pàgines
...color, weight, and consistence of bread ; but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body. Sight or feeling conveys an idea of the actual motion of bodies, but as to that wonderful force or... | |
| Samuel Bailey - 1855 - 308 pàgines
...colour, weight, and consistence of bread ; but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body." * " It is the business of memory," remarks Leibnitz, " to retain what we know, and of reminiscence... | |
| Henri Édouard Schedel - 1858 - 508 pàgines
...color, weight, and consistence of bread ; but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body. Sight or feeling conveys an idea of the actual motion of bodies ; but as to that wonderful force or... | |
| James Fieser - 2005 - 408 pàgines
...of the colour, weight, and consistence of bread; but neither sense nor reason can inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body," &c. He proceeds, "But notwithstanding this ignorance of natural powers and principles, we always presume,... | |
| Various - 2002 - 596 pàgines
...the color, weight, and consistency of bread, but neither sense nor reason can ever inform us of those qualities which fit it for the nourishment and support of the human body. Sight or feeling conveys an idea of the actual motion of bodies, but as to that wonderful force or... | |
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