The Study of PhilosophyCollegiate Press, 1987 - 340 pages |
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Page 184
... sense of becoming as knowledgeable and as wise as possible ; Kant defining it in the sense of becoming worthy in God's eyes ; Bentham and Mill defining it universally . What was common to each , however , was the view that happiness ...
... sense of becoming as knowledgeable and as wise as possible ; Kant defining it in the sense of becoming worthy in God's eyes ; Bentham and Mill defining it universally . What was common to each , however , was the view that happiness ...
Page 225
... Sense awareness , first of all , varies profoundly among species . Some species have senses we lack , such as sensitivity to radio waves or to magnetic fields . Cer- tain fish , for example , sense their surroundings by the deformation ...
... Sense awareness , first of all , varies profoundly among species . Some species have senses we lack , such as sensitivity to radio waves or to magnetic fields . Cer- tain fish , for example , sense their surroundings by the deformation ...
Page 299
... sense unambiguously " when this is not at all the case . On the contrary , " the actual use , compared with that suggested by the picture , " is " muddied " ( Philosophical Investigations I , 426 ) . Certainly language has this effect ...
... sense unambiguously " when this is not at all the case . On the contrary , " the actual use , compared with that suggested by the picture , " is " muddied " ( Philosophical Investigations I , 426 ) . Certainly language has this effect ...
Contents
It began here | 11 |
And so I go about the world | 29 |
Aristotle and the art of thinking | 67 |
Copyright | |
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