Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 8British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
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Page 331
... activity which relates them . This reveals the direction of Condillac's speculation . It shows that so far from his being a mere follower of Locke and popular exponent of the doctrine that all our knowledge is derived from sensations ...
... activity which relates them . This reveals the direction of Condillac's speculation . It shows that so far from his being a mere follower of Locke and popular exponent of the doctrine that all our knowledge is derived from sensations ...
Page 335
... activity of mind ; that the historian , like the philosopher , is engaged in interpreting a present activity , and that history is therefore contemporaneous . Before I try to show the importance of the tendencies which these two ...
... activity of mind ; that the historian , like the philosopher , is engaged in interpreting a present activity , and that history is therefore contemporaneous . Before I try to show the importance of the tendencies which these two ...
Page 345
British Academy. Croce conceives mind as activity . This activity is not confronted with an independent matter to which it is passive . Passivity is a pure negation , and so enters into and is included in the concept of activity . This ...
British Academy. Croce conceives mind as activity . This activity is not confronted with an independent matter to which it is passive . Passivity is a pure negation , and so enters into and is included in the concept of activity . This ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191617 | 33 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191718 | 51 |
JACOB AND THE MANDRAKES BY J G FRAZER FELLOW OF | 57 |
Copyright | |
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