Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 27British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 85
... seems to me that in the case of the fundamental principles of logic there is no vicious circle because the truth of these principles , if de- ducible from their conclusions at all , is only so deducible because an independent premiss is ...
... seems to me that in the case of the fundamental principles of logic there is no vicious circle because the truth of these principles , if de- ducible from their conclusions at all , is only so deducible because an independent premiss is ...
Page 91
... seems almost beyond human capacity to make the fundamental notions com- pletely clear to oneself , and so there is always the risk that an apparent intuition ( or a priori argument ) which seems to yield truth may really not do so ...
... seems almost beyond human capacity to make the fundamental notions com- pletely clear to oneself , and so there is always the risk that an apparent intuition ( or a priori argument ) which seems to yield truth may really not do so ...
Page 381
... seem so to him ; and vice versa what seems simple and obvious to him is almost always so entirely remote from our ways of thought that we should never have dreamed of it . Accor- dingly , any explanations of the origin of religion or ...
... seem so to him ; and vice versa what seems simple and obvious to him is almost always so entirely remote from our ways of thought that we should never have dreamed of it . Accor- dingly , any explanations of the origin of religion or ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By J H Clapham | 19 |
TSARDOM AND IMPERIALISM IN THE FAR EAST and Middle East | 25 |
REASON AND INTUITION Philosophical Lecture By A C Ewing | 67 |
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Adam Smith appeared Archaeology argument Arthur Baghdad railway belief Beowulf Bonar British Academy bronze Cambridge Celtic art century Chinese Eastern Railway Christ coherence conclusions connexion Cretan criticism DAWES HICKS death early East economic edition Eikon England English Evans excavation fact feeling France friars Germany Greek Harrington Henry Henry Hills Hicks Hicks's important inference influence interest intuition Italian Italy James John Knossos knowledge Langland later Lectures letter logical London Lord Lord Stamp Macdonald Manchuria medal medallist ment Milton mind Minoan Museum nature never Oxford Paul Persia Persian Cossack Brigade philosophy Piers Plowman Pisanello poem poet political portrait problems Professor propositions proverbs railway Ranalli Ranalli's reason Roman Royal Russian scholar School Scotland Seistan Shakespeare Smith Society theory things thought tion true truth University volume whole words writing wrote XXVII