Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 10British Academy - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 26
Page 167
... distinction between general and particular , and between more and less general , he would in dealing with characters substitute the distinction of the determinable and the completely or relatively determinate . To predicate colour or ...
... distinction between general and particular , and between more and less general , he would in dealing with characters substitute the distinction of the determinable and the completely or relatively determinate . To predicate colour or ...
Page 172
... distinction between truth and falsity holds also for the inarticulate domain of what is merely taken for granted . But it is only so far as alternatives are apprehended as such , i . e . as pro- positions , that we become aware of the ...
... distinction between truth and falsity holds also for the inarticulate domain of what is merely taken for granted . But it is only so far as alternatives are apprehended as such , i . e . as pro- positions , that we become aware of the ...
Page 247
... distinction of Kant's , which it will repay us to consider for a moment . In the Critique it appears as the distinction between empirical and transcendental apperception . The former implies only subjective or individual experi- ence ...
... distinction of Kant's , which it will repay us to consider for a moment . In the Critique it appears as the distinction between empirical and transcendental apperception . The former implies only subjective or individual experi- ence ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Adam Smith ancient appears artist beauty beginning Bishops Boccaccio boroughs British Academy called century chancery character charter Christmas Church clausulae Commedia Convivio cursus Dante Dante's death Decameron Divina Commedia Easter edition Empire England English Epiphany evidence fact Folio France French give Greek Halluliah Holy interest Isai Italian Italy judgement Kant Kant's Keats king Lady Day later Lect Lectionary Lecture Lessons London Lord means mediaeval melody mind nation natural never Palm Sunday paroxytone Petrarch philosophy place-names plays poem poet poetry printed Professor Psalm Quartos quattrocento question Rabbula read with B.¹ reckoning record relation resp royal scholars seems Shakespeare Shelley Statius Sunday Syriac T. F. TOUT things tion town unity universal velox verse viii Vulgari Eloquentia Westminster whole words writing دو