Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 31 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 66
Page 12
But anyone who reflects on the problem of universals and on its history in the philosophical speculation of the past comes quickly to realize two things : first , that the term is used in more than one sense ; secondly , that we are not ...
But anyone who reflects on the problem of universals and on its history in the philosophical speculation of the past comes quickly to realize two things : first , that the term is used in more than one sense ; secondly , that we are not ...
Page 28
That problem is supposed to be solved by showing its unreality in this way : the universal man can be ' abolished ' by stressing its extensional side , regarding it as a class , and then ' abolishing ' the class by thinking of it as a ...
That problem is supposed to be solved by showing its unreality in this way : the universal man can be ' abolished ' by stressing its extensional side , regarding it as a class , and then ' abolishing ' the class by thinking of it as a ...
Page 291
This gave him the opportunity of piloting a small class through several interesting problems in the bibliography of ... are at bottom a purely bibliographical problem , to be attacked by strictly bibliographical methods , and only to be ...
This gave him the opportunity of piloting a small class through several interesting problems in the bibliography of ... are at bottom a purely bibliographical problem , to be attacked by strictly bibliographical methods , and only to be ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
CORRESPONDING FELLOWS 1945 | 4 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir John Clapham | 12 |
THE POETRY OF THOMAS GRAY Warton Lecture on English Poetry | 43 |
6 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appeared begin body British called century classical collection College common complete consider course criticism early edition English evidence example experience expression fact Gaelic Galway give given hand Hippocrates human important influence instance interest Irish Italy kind knowledge known later learning least lectures less letters literature lived logic London manuscript material matter mean mind Museum nature never notes observe once original Oxford particular passage perhaps period philosophy Plato poetry Pollard possible present printed problem Professor published qualities question reason reference regarded relation Roman scholars seems sense Shakespeare Society story story-teller suggest tales tell things thought tion tradition universal volume whole writing written wrote