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الصفحة 128
... nature of cause . Dr. Sewall argued in favor of the close resemblance be- tween the doctrines of Pyrrho and Hume . Both denied knowl- edge in the true meaning of the term , and also relation as far as phenomena themselves were concerned ...
... nature of cause . Dr. Sewall argued in favor of the close resemblance be- tween the doctrines of Pyrrho and Hume . Both denied knowl- edge in the true meaning of the term , and also relation as far as phenomena themselves were concerned ...
الصفحة 129
... Natural phenomena were regarded as appearances of divine power . All of the primary qualities of Locke were reduced to secondary qualities by Berkeley . Ideas were not distinguished from sensations by Berkeley . In the Berkeleian ...
... Natural phenomena were regarded as appearances of divine power . All of the primary qualities of Locke were reduced to secondary qualities by Berkeley . Ideas were not distinguished from sensations by Berkeley . In the Berkeleian ...
الصفحة 131
... nature of the knower and the known are the same . Pragmatism would deal with a world of pure experience from which other elements have been eliminated . Conduct becomes the test of thought with pragmatism . The will has a determining ...
... nature of the knower and the known are the same . Pragmatism would deal with a world of pure experience from which other elements have been eliminated . Conduct becomes the test of thought with pragmatism . The will has a determining ...
الصفحة 132
... nature . It does full justice to the conjunctive relation of experience by its supposition of an uninterrupted flow of experience in which the knower and the known become the same in suc- cessive stages . Knowledge consists in relations ...
... nature . It does full justice to the conjunctive relation of experience by its supposition of an uninterrupted flow of experience in which the knower and the known become the same in suc- cessive stages . Knowledge consists in relations ...
الصفحة 135
... nature of things . Mr. Johnstone took the position that philosophy cannot be reduced to science . Science makes progress because it starts with assumptions , which assumptions are derived from phil- osophy . Prof. James , according to ...
... nature of things . Mr. Johnstone took the position that philosophy cannot be reduced to science . Science makes progress because it starts with assumptions , which assumptions are derived from phil- osophy . Prof. James , according to ...
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asked attention believed Berkeley biological psychology causality cause cerned character chology closing the discussion Coleman comparative psychology conception concerning the late consciousness consideration continuing the discussion copula definite Descartes discussion following Doctor Sewall doctrine dualism Dubray Edward E effect elements endeavor epistomological error existence experience experimental psychology fact Farquhar Fichte following the reading give herent Hinton Hume idea illustration imperfect inasmuch influence intellectualism introspective method intuition John Locke Johnstone Kant Kantian Kirk knowledge logical MACBRIDE STERRETT manifested meeting mental mentioned metaphysical monism movement nature necessary objective old psychology Omar ontological paper phenomena philosophy physical physiological psychology posi position Pragmatism pragmatists predicate present Prof psychic Pyrrho question Raymond reality referred regarded relation remarked resolutions concerning Richardson scientific sensation sense Shakespeare Society soul speaker declared Spinoza sub-conscious substance symbol term things thought tion true truth unity universe Weber's law