Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 5British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
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Page 35
... continuous ; the continuous does not presuppose the discrete . The abstract pre- supposes the concrete ; the concrete does not presuppose the abstract . Part presupposes whole ; whole does not presuppose part . Subject pre- supposes ...
... continuous ; the continuous does not presuppose the discrete . The abstract pre- supposes the concrete ; the concrete does not presuppose the abstract . Part presupposes whole ; whole does not presuppose part . Subject pre- supposes ...
Page 59
... continuous stream . It is somewhere within the body , somewhere within the unseen core of it , that the immediate con- ditions and conditioning of consciousness as a continuous stream must be placed ; and we consequently locate that ...
... continuous stream . It is somewhere within the body , somewhere within the unseen core of it , that the immediate con- ditions and conditioning of consciousness as a continuous stream must be placed ; and we consequently locate that ...
Page 74
... continuous homogeneous content of duration or extension , which is the lowest and simplest shape either change or motion can assume , and therefore that which is most essential to them , and also that in which they may escape the ...
... continuous homogeneous content of duration or extension , which is the lowest and simplest shape either change or motion can assume , and therefore that which is most essential to them , and also that in which they may escape the ...
Contents
Ninth Annual General Meeting JULY 5 1911 ADDRESS BY | 3 |
WARTON LECTURE ON ENGLISH POETRY | 4 |
HENRY CHARLES LEA 18251909 By E P CHEYNEY | 17 |
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Academy Aegina Aeginetan ancient appears Athenian Athens bards beginning belong borrowed days British bronze Brythonic called celt Celtic century Chalcis character coinage coins Coligny Calendar connexion consciousness Coriolanus dative declension Delisle derived didrachm drachm early electrum empirical English Eretria Euboea Euboic existence experience fact genitive give goddess Goidelic grains Greek Hittite Holder Ibid idea inscription instance Ireland Irish knowledge later Latin letters literary Lord Macgr meaning mentioned month Museum nature Nîmes O'Conor Don's Book O'Grady object objectified obol original Parmenides Peisistratus perceived perception perhaps Pheidon philosophy poem poet poetry present Prize Law probably Professor question real condition Reality regard relation represented Roman seems sensations Shakespeare silver Solon spelling stanzas stater stone suggested supposed Syriac tetradrachms things thought tion truth Ucuetis weight Welsh whole word writing καὶ