Proceedings of the British AcademyBritish Academy, 1903 - Science |
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Page 105
... knowledge as something given to the mind from without , idealists have sometimes dwelt too exclusively on the subjective aspect of knowledge . This was the case , as we have seen , with Kant , and it is apt to be the case with those who ...
... knowledge as something given to the mind from without , idealists have sometimes dwelt too exclusively on the subjective aspect of knowledge . This was the case , as we have seen , with Kant , and it is apt to be the case with those who ...
Page 226
... knowledge , in order to determine the boundary of man's speculative imagination , and a fortiori of his real knowledge and probable beliefs . He began by taking one fundamental postulate for granted . We cannot even think or imagine ...
... knowledge , in order to determine the boundary of man's speculative imagination , and a fortiori of his real knowledge and probable beliefs . He began by taking one fundamental postulate for granted . We cannot even think or imagine ...
Page 230
... knowledge , was perhaps understood by Locke in a meaning which implies incomplete ideas , which we can neither get rid of , nor unite in con- sistent intellectual unity ; while yet we cannot see enough of them to assert that they ...
... knowledge , was perhaps understood by Locke in a meaning which implies incomplete ideas , which we can neither get rid of , nor unite in con- sistent intellectual unity ; while yet we cannot see enough of them to assert that they ...
Contents
Fellow of thE ACADEMY Read Oct 28 1904 | 183 |
SUMMARY PSYCHOLOGICAL ELEMENTS IN GREEK SCULPTURE | 251 |
HENRY SIDGWICK BY JAMES BRYCE | 277 |
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