Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 6British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 279
... Mind always a world ; its objects always fragments . ' 8. The riches of mind ; and tertiary qualities . II 6 9. Independence of objects . 10. Minds and Mind ' . 11. The wider issues . Supplementary Note : Mind as ' thing ' and as ...
... Mind always a world ; its objects always fragments . ' 8. The riches of mind ; and tertiary qualities . II 6 9. Independence of objects . 10. Minds and Mind ' . 11. The wider issues . Supplementary Note : Mind as ' thing ' and as ...
Page 288
... mind . Nor is there the least difficulty in justifying this union of an enjoyed mind with a contem- plated body in a single whole . For our original fact has taught us that physical things which we contemplate and our mind which we ...
... mind . Nor is there the least difficulty in justifying this union of an enjoyed mind with a contem- plated body in a single whole . For our original fact has taught us that physical things which we contemplate and our mind which we ...
Page 307
... minds , which is consciousness and an empirical quality , with the formal or categorial characters of things , which are contained alike in mind and things and are only most easily experienced in minds . In insisting that the enjoyer ...
... minds , which is consciousness and an empirical quality , with the formal or categorial characters of things , which are contained alike in mind and things and are only most easily experienced in minds . In insisting that the enjoyer ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS BY THE RIGHT HON VISCOUNT BRYCE O M | 7 |
THE CELTIC INSCRIPTIONS OF CISALPINE GAUL BY SIR JOHN RHŶs | 23 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS AT THE OPENING MEETING OF THE INTER | 113 |
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