An Introductory Course in PhilosophyMacmillan, 1939 - Всего страниц: 508 |
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Стр. 178
... agnosticism . It differs from scepticism in being far less sweeping in its negation . The sceptic denies the possibility of attaining knowledge in any field of enquiry ; the agnostic denies the possibility in only certain fields ...
... agnosticism . It differs from scepticism in being far less sweeping in its negation . The sceptic denies the possibility of attaining knowledge in any field of enquiry ; the agnostic denies the possibility in only certain fields ...
Стр. 193
... agnosticism . This was due to the fact that the mind was imprisoned , as it were , in its own forms . This , however , is not true of critical positivism . The mind has created the forms in which it thinks ; but its power to create did ...
... agnosticism . This was due to the fact that the mind was imprisoned , as it were , in its own forms . This , however , is not true of critical positivism . The mind has created the forms in which it thinks ; but its power to create did ...
Стр. 216
... agnosticism that denies man's power to solve such profound problems . When it is once clearly recognized that all these are false problems due to the hypostatizing tendency of the mind , then thinking will cease to occupy itself with ...
... agnosticism that denies man's power to solve such profound problems . When it is once clearly recognized that all these are false problems due to the hypostatizing tendency of the mind , then thinking will cease to occupy itself with ...
Содержание
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE FUNCTION OF | 2 |
THE PROBLEMS OF ETHICS | 19 |
Авторские права | |
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Adeimantus agnosticism Anytus apprehended argument artistic object attaining knowledge beauty believe Callicles chapter Clarendon Press clarify clear and distinct colour conception conformity creation critical Crito deduction DesCartes desire divine effect empiricism empiricist epistemological esthetic principle ethical principle evil examination example existence experience explain fact formulate function of art Glaucon Gorgias Greeks Hume ideal ideas illustration implicit insists intuition investigation judgment Justify your answer Kant Kant's knowl laws live Lucretius man's nature mathematics matter means Meletus merely metaphysical principle method mind naïve realism never objective idealism opinion organization perceive Phaedrus phenomenal phenomenalist Phil Philebus philosophy Plato pleasure poets priori problem Protagoras pure rationalist reason regarded relations rules sceptic scientist seeks seems sense sense-objects social regulations Socrates sophists soul theory of knowledge things thinkers thinking thought Thrasymachus tion transcendental true truth understanding vision wisdom