Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 8British Academy - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 42
Page 31
... experience , for such lessons seem to them to be part of that past of which they are weary and from which they are seeking to escape . Yet experience must be still our guide . What other guide have we ? There has never been a time in ...
... experience , for such lessons seem to them to be part of that past of which they are weary and from which they are seeking to escape . Yet experience must be still our guide . What other guide have we ? There has never been a time in ...
Page 302
... experience , on the assumption that experience is something sub- stantial . Experience was regarded by earlier empiricists as a method for making real discoveries , a safer witness than reasoning to what might exist in nature ; but now ...
... experience , on the assumption that experience is something sub- stantial . Experience was regarded by earlier empiricists as a method for making real discoveries , a safer witness than reasoning to what might exist in nature ; but now ...
Page 337
... experience , what for all of us is the basis of our experience , not what actually came first in the chronological order . The answer psychology gives to the question is that the immediate data of consciousness are the data of sense ...
... experience , what for all of us is the basis of our experience , not what actually came first in the chronological order . The answer psychology gives to the question is that the immediate data of consciousness are the data of sense ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191617 | 33 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191718 | 51 |
JACOB AND THE MANDRAKES BY J G FRAZER FELLOW OF | 57 |
25 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academy Alcibiades ancient appears Arabic authority Beethoven believe Benedict Benedict IX British Caesar called Caswallon century character Charmides conception connexion count of Tusculum death doctrine Egypt Elected Emanuel England English English poetry expression fact France French give Government Gratian Greek Gregory Henry human idea ideal interest Italy John King language later less literature living Lord mandrake Marozia means mind modern nature Nennius never perhaps Persian Phaedo philosophy Piedmont plant Plato poem poetic poetry poets political pontificate Pope present Prince Professor question Raleigh reality regarded relation represented righteousness Roman Rome Russian Savoy Saxons seems sense Shakespeare Silvester III Socrates Sophroniscus soul speak Spinoza spirit story suisse theory things thought tion tradition true truth Tysilio verse whole words writing Xanthippe Xenophon