Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 9British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
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Page 126
... reality , and extend knowledge so that experience fashions itself . Even in the experience that is thus conditioned ... reality . That view is surely too narrow by which reflection is treated as if inherently of a relational and ...
... reality , and extend knowledge so that experience fashions itself . Even in the experience that is thus conditioned ... reality . That view is surely too narrow by which reflection is treated as if inherently of a relational and ...
Page 131
... reality , for it constructs reality by its own activity . I have already referred to the difficulties which seem to me as fatal to this principle of subjective idealism , as difficulties of another kind are to pluralistic materialism ...
... reality , for it constructs reality by its own activity . I have already referred to the difficulties which seem to me as fatal to this principle of subjective idealism , as difficulties of another kind are to pluralistic materialism ...
Page 138
... reality , and present it in our sciences confined by abstractions . We do not take in all the aspects of our object world at the same time , nor can any of these be for us , whose capacity is finite , exhaustive of reality in orders of ...
... reality , and present it in our sciences confined by abstractions . We do not take in all the aspects of our object world at the same time , nor can any of these be for us , whose capacity is finite , exhaustive of reality in orders of ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191819 | 19 |
RALEIGH LECTURE ON HISTORY 1920 THE BRITISH SOLDIER | 29 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191920 | 31 |
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