The Cambridge History of English Literature, Volume 14Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller G.P. Putnam's sons, 1917 - English literature |
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Page 7
... facts . In his Lectures on the Philosophy of the IIuman Mind ( 1820 ) , published after his death , these principles were applied to the details of perception and cognition . He made the important distinction between the muscular sense ...
... facts . In his Lectures on the Philosophy of the IIuman Mind ( 1820 ) , published after his death , these principles were applied to the details of perception and cognition . He made the important distinction between the muscular sense ...
Page 13
... fact of their being ( as Hamilton calls them ) à priori “ forms of thought " does not interfere with the objective truth of our spatio - temporal knowledge ; it is a knowledge , under the forms of space and time , of things which really ...
... fact of their being ( as Hamilton calls them ) à priori “ forms of thought " does not interfere with the objective truth of our spatio - temporal knowledge ; it is a knowledge , under the forms of space and time , of things which really ...
Page 15
... fact that he possessed a much finer and subtler nature than his father's - a mind which could not be entirely satisfied by the hereditary creed . He remained more or less orthodox , according to the standards of his school ; but he ...
... fact that he possessed a much finer and subtler nature than his father's - a mind which could not be entirely satisfied by the hereditary creed . He remained more or less orthodox , according to the standards of his school ; but he ...
Page 19
... facts to general truths , and also to justify the transition : though he is more convincing in his psychological account of the process than in his logical justification of its validity . When he is brought face to face with the ...
... facts to general truths , and also to justify the transition : though he is more convincing in his psychological account of the process than in his logical justification of its validity . When he is brought face to face with the ...
Page 20
... is not itself assumed . Such a bare catalogue of facts , not penetrating to the principle of their connection , would not , in ordinary cases , justify an inference that can be relied on . But Mill thinks that 20 Philosophers.
... is not itself assumed . Such a bare catalogue of facts , not penetrating to the principle of their connection , would not , in ordinary cases , justify an inference that can be relied on . But Mill thinks that 20 Philosophers.
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