John Locke |
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Page 49
... Suppose , he says , a man who has become acquainted with every shade of blue but one ; and suppose specimens of all the shades he has met with to be placed before him ranged in order from the deepest to the lightest . Then ( a ) the man ...
... Suppose , he says , a man who has become acquainted with every shade of blue but one ; and suppose specimens of all the shades he has met with to be placed before him ranged in order from the deepest to the lightest . Then ( a ) the man ...
Page 80
... suppose a support . ” 1 In other words , he says in the Essay that we cannot imagine how simple ideas can exist without a substratum in which they inhere ; and he adds in the first letter to Stillingfleet that we see it to be logically ...
... suppose a support . ” 1 In other words , he says in the Essay that we cannot imagine how simple ideas can exist without a substratum in which they inhere ; and he adds in the first letter to Stillingfleet that we see it to be logically ...
Page 128
... suppose that because some of these features are especially pervasive or important , they can or must exist in a pure form either in our experience or beyond it . Aristotle , for example , pointed out that we can distinguish in every ...
... suppose that because some of these features are especially pervasive or important , they can or must exist in a pure form either in our experience or beyond it . Aristotle , for example , pointed out that we can distinguish in every ...
Contents
Introduction | 8 |
The Aim and Method of Lockes Theory | 23 |
Ideas and Experience | 41 |
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Common terms and phrases
A. J. Ayer actually analytic proposition argument assertion belief bodies Book causal certainty chapter clear colour complex ideas concept consider consists course criticism Descartes difficulty discussion distinction empirical Essay evidence example existence experience fact function give human knowledge idea of substance ideas of reflection ideas of sensation identity immaterial substance important introspection intuitive intuitive knowledge John Locke judgement kind language ledge Letter Concerning Toleration Locke's account Locke's theory logical material mathematical matter means ment mental activities mental processes merely mind mixed modes motion nature observation particular perceive perception philo philosophers phrase physical objects political premises primary qualities problem problem of universals properties propositions psychology question reason refer relations between ideas resemble scholastic scholasticism secondary qualities sensation and reflection sense data signs simple ideas sort statements suppose talk theory of knowledge things thinking thought tion toleration understanding universal volition word