Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 33British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 29
... natural ' . For the purposes of this lecture I venture to borrow the following description of a ' natural ' characteristic proposed by Professor Broad in a discussion of the non - naturalis- tic account of goodness which was maintained ...
... natural ' . For the purposes of this lecture I venture to borrow the following description of a ' natural ' characteristic proposed by Professor Broad in a discussion of the non - naturalis- tic account of goodness which was maintained ...
Page 144
... natural and customary . Natural is from Geometry , consisting in Uniformity ( that is Equality ) , and Proportion . Customary Beauty is begotten by the use of our senses to those objects which are usually pleasing to us from other ...
... natural and customary . Natural is from Geometry , consisting in Uniformity ( that is Equality ) , and Proportion . Customary Beauty is begotten by the use of our senses to those objects which are usually pleasing to us from other ...
Page 299
... nature can be looked on as fields superimposed on each other , and forming certain structures by their over- lapping . In the three ' 1920 books ' Whitehead was considering the general fact of relatedness in nature in terms of the ...
... nature can be looked on as fields superimposed on each other , and forming certain structures by their over- lapping . In the three ' 1920 books ' Whitehead was considering the general fact of relatedness in nature in terms of the ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19467 | 7 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir H I Bell | 19 |
NATURALISTIC ETHICS Philosophical Lecture By W F R Hardie | 29 |
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