Philosophical Works ; with Notes and Supplementary Disertations, Volum 2Georg Olms, 1967 - 1034 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 69.
Pàgina 546
... animal is indeed like the works of nature , perfect in its kind , and can bear the most critical examination of the mechanic or the mathematician . One example from the animal last mentioned , may serve to illustrate this . Bees , it is ...
... animal is indeed like the works of nature , perfect in its kind , and can bear the most critical examination of the mechanic or the mathematician . One example from the animal last mentioned , may serve to illustrate this . Bees , it is ...
Pàgina 568
... animal and rational principles of action . For this sudden or instinctive resentment , is an animal prin- ciple common to us with brute - animals . But that resentment which the authors I have named call deliberate , must fall under the ...
... animal and rational principles of action . For this sudden or instinctive resentment , is an animal prin- ciple common to us with brute - animals . But that resentment which the authors I have named call deliberate , must fall under the ...
Pàgina 612
... animal test , may be , and very often is , the weakest according to the rational . The grand and the important competition of contrary motives is between the animal , on the one hand , and the rational on the other . This is the ...
... animal test , may be , and very often is , the weakest according to the rational . The grand and the important competition of contrary motives is between the animal , on the one hand , and the rational on the other . This is the ...
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Philosophical Works ; with Notes and Supplementary Disertations, Volum 1 Thomas Reid Visualització de fragments - 1967 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
active power affection affirmed Anima animal appetite apprehend argument Aristotle Aristotle's Averroes belief body called cause Cicero ciples cognition colour Common Sense conceive conception conduct consciousness consequence considered contrary degree denote Descartes determined distinction distinguished doctrine enim Epicurus evident existence expression external faculty feeling gisms give human Hume idea immediate intel intellect intuitive judge judgment justice kind knowledge language Leibnitz liberty logic Malebranche mankind matter meaning mediate ment mind mode moral motive Muretus nature necessary necessity nerves nihil notion object observed opinion passion perceive perception phænomena phænomenon philo philosophers Plato Plutarch predicate prescience present primary qualities principles of action proper proposition quæ quam quod racter rational reason regard Reid relation representationism Secondary sensation sensus Sensus Communis shew sion sophism species sunt suppose syllogism term Themistius Theophrastus things thought tion tive truth universal University of Glasgow virtue word