Philosophical Works ; with Notes and Supplementary Disertations, Volum 2Georg Olms, 1967 - 1034 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 93.
Pàgina 597
... evident . Is it not evident that the external senses are given , that we may discern those qualities of bodies which may be useful or hurtful to us ? -Memory , that we may retain the knowledge we have acquired - judgment and ...
... evident . Is it not evident that the external senses are given , that we may discern those qualities of bodies which may be useful or hurtful to us ? -Memory , that we may retain the knowledge we have acquired - judgment and ...
Pàgina 614
... evident that there can be no moral obligation to what is impossible , that there can be no crime in yielding to neces- sity , and that there can be no justice in punishing a person for what it was not in his power to avoid . There are ...
... evident that there can be no moral obligation to what is impossible , that there can be no crime in yielding to neces- sity , and that there can be no justice in punishing a person for what it was not in his power to avoid . There are ...
Pàgina 767
... evident judgment . He however applies the term specially to denote those dialectical prin- ciples , axioms , or canons , those catholic judgments which constitute what in Logic and Rhetoric have since Aristotle been called common places ...
... evident judgment . He however applies the term specially to denote those dialectical prin- ciples , axioms , or canons , those catholic judgments which constitute what in Logic and Rhetoric have since Aristotle been called common places ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
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