Besides, you cannot seriously think that every little chicken that is hatched, has to rummage through all possible theories until it lights upon the good idea of picking up something and eating it. On the contrary, you think the chicken has an innate... How the Brain Evolved Language - Page 10by Donald Loritz - 2002 - 240 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Abner Shimony - Philosophy - 1993 - 358 pages
...until it lights upon the good idea of picking up something and eating it. On the contrary, you think the chicken has an innate idea of doing this; that is to say, that it can think of this, but has no faculty of thinking of anything else. The chicken you say pecks by instinct. But if you are going to... | |
| Lorenzo Magnani, Ping Li - Technology & Engineering - 2007 - 525 pages
...until it lights upon the good idea of picking up something and eating it. On the contrary, you think the chicken has an innate idea of doing this; that is to say, that it can think of this, but has no faculty of thinking anything else. The chicken you say pecks by instinct. But if you are going to think... | |
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