The Cambridge History of English Literature, Volume 14Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller G.P. Putnam's sons, 1916 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 98
Page 8
... known , but their efforts were without result ; an article on Kant by Thomas Brown in the second number of The Edin- burgh Review ( 1803 ) only showed the poverty of the land . Coleridge , indeed , was a much more important medium ; he ...
... known , but their efforts were without result ; an article on Kant by Thomas Brown in the second number of The Edin- burgh Review ( 1803 ) only showed the poverty of the land . Coleridge , indeed , was a much more important medium ; he ...
Page 9
... known as ' the Quantification of the Predicate . ' Hamilton's own exposi- tions of it are incomplete and are contained in appendixes to his Discussions and to his Lectures . The clearest accounts of his views have to be sought in An ...
... known as ' the Quantification of the Predicate . ' Hamilton's own exposi- tions of it are incomplete and are contained in appendixes to his Discussions and to his Lectures . The clearest accounts of his views have to be sought in An ...
Page 10
... known but only inferred ; the primary qualities which we do perceive ' are perceived as in our organism . ' That is to say , when we perceive a table , we do not perceive the shape or size of the table ; knowledge of these is got by ...
... known but only inferred ; the primary qualities which we do perceive ' are perceived as in our organism . ' That is to say , when we perceive a table , we do not perceive the shape or size of the table ; knowledge of these is got by ...
Page 12
... known can be and ought to be believed . What then is belief ? By classifying it as a form or ' faculty ' of cognition , Hamilton strikes at the root of his doctrine that thought excludes the notion of the absolute or infinite . When on ...
... known can be and ought to be believed . What then is belief ? By classifying it as a form or ' faculty ' of cognition , Hamilton strikes at the root of his doctrine that thought excludes the notion of the absolute or infinite . When on ...
Page 26
... known , things must be knowable , or fitted for knowledge . ' Knowledge is the sym- pathy of intelligence with intelligence , through the medium of qualified or particular existence . ' Religious philosophy in England was stimulated and ...
... known , things must be knowable , or fitted for knowledge . ' Knowledge is the sym- pathy of intelligence with intelligence , through the medium of qualified or particular existence . ' Religious philosophy in England was stimulated and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
2nd edn afterwards Anglo-Indian Australian Australian poetry Ballads bibliography biographical British Calcutta Cambridge Canada chap Charles criticism doctrine Dublin E. L. XIV earl early Edinburgh Edinburgh Review edited Edward eighteenth century Essays France French George George Cruikshank Henry historian History of England History of India illustrated India influence instruction Ireland Irish James John Joseph Lancaster Journal knowledge language later edns Lectures Letters literary London Lord lyric Magazine Melbourne Memoirs Middle English modern moral narrative nature newspapers nineteenth century original Orpington Oxford Pamphleteer paper period Philosophy Philosophy of Perception poems poet Poetical poetry political popular principles prose published reform Review Richard Robert Robert Louis Stevenson Rptd Sam Slick schools Sketches society Songs South African poetry story Sydney theory Thomas thought tion Toronto translated Travels verse vols volume voyage weekly William words writers written wrote