Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 28British Academy - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 50
Page 127
... means ' Either a sound was heard , or one would have been heard if certain conditions describable in terms of sensations had been fulfilled ' . He would even wish to go further , and to say that ' There was a sound ' means ' Either a ...
... means ' Either a sound was heard , or one would have been heard if certain conditions describable in terms of sensations had been fulfilled ' . He would even wish to go further , and to say that ' There was a sound ' means ' Either a ...
Page 130
... means of sensation , and the non - discursive cognition of sensibilia which constitutes sensations of the higher ... means ' perceive by means of sensation ' . In the second it cannot mean this . It would be nonsensical to say that we ...
... means of sensation , and the non - discursive cognition of sensibilia which constitutes sensations of the higher ... means ' perceive by means of sensation ' . In the second it cannot mean this . It would be nonsensical to say that we ...
Page 188
... means of all efforts after perfection . Two consequences followed from this man - centred philosophy of life . One was the divorce between religion and morality . Explan of As the determining factor in human conduct was not the service ...
... means of all efforts after perfection . Two consequences followed from this man - centred philosophy of life . One was the divorce between religion and morality . Explan of As the determining factor in human conduct was not the service ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By J H Clapham | 13 |
ROMANTIC POETRY AND THE FINE ARTS Warton Lecture on English | 101 |
BERKELEYS ARGUMENT ABOUT MATERIAL SUBSTANCE Philo | 119 |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Academy Aeschylus Afrikander alliterative alliterative verse antiquities Archaeological armour Augsburg beak-head beast Berkeley Berkeley's Borovka British Bronze Cape Colony century character Chinese Colony colour criticism curls decoration deer dialects early Egypt English engraved etched example excavation fact followed Gaulish George George Adam Smith gold Greek Grierson Hamlet Hans Burgkmair Hopfer Indian Indo-Aryan inscriptions interest Iranian Isabella d'Este Italian Keats Kelermes languages later lecture lines linguistic material things means ment Milner mind Minusinsk Musée de l'Armée Museum nomads Nürnberg object Ordos Pascal Pazyryk Peffenhauser perceive person Petrie's piece plaques PLATE play poem poet poetry Prakrit preverb Professor pronoun Rostovtsev Sarmatian scholars Scottish Scythic Scyths sensations sense sensibile sensibilia sentence Siberia Society South Africa stanzas style Survey tion tomb translation Transvaal Uitlanders vase verb verse Vienna volitions Wallace Collection Welsh words XXVIII