... it, of the folk who sold it, of the folk who have seen it or used it, of the man who is now experiencing a comfortable sense of support, combined with our expectations of an analogous future, terminated finally by a different set of experiences when... Nature - Page 79edited by - 1917Full view - About this book
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1917 - 586 pages
...by a different set of experiences when tlie chair collapses and becomes fire-wood. The format tlon of that type of concept was a tremendous job, and...points. In the first place, science is rooted in what 1 have just called the whole apparatus of common-sense thought. That is the datum from which it starts,... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - Science - 1916 - 950 pages
...geologists tell us that it took many tens of millions of years. I can well believe it. I now emphasize two points. In the first place, science is rooted...from which it starts, and to which it must recur. We may speculate, if it amuses us, of other beings in other planets who have arranged analogous experiences... | |
| John Michels (Journalist) - Science - 1916 - 958 pages
...geologists tell us that it took many tens of millions of years. I can well believe it. I now emphasize two points. In the first place, science is rooted...from which it starts, and to which it must recur. We may speculate, if it amuses us, of other beings in other planets who have arranged analogous experiences... | |
| Alfred North Whitehead - Education - 1917 - 248 pages
...concept of all the interrelated experiences connected with that chair, — namely, of the experience of the folk who made it, of the folk who sold it,...from which it starts, and to which it must recur. We may speculate, if it amuses us, of other beings in other planets who have arranged analogous experiences... | |
| Aristotelian Society (Great Britain) - Philosophy - 1917 - 522 pages
...concept of all the interrelated experiences connected with that chair — namely, of the experience of the folk who made it, of the folk who sold it,...from which it starts, and to which it must recur. We may speculate, if it amuses us, of other beings in other planets who have arranged analogous experiences... | |
| Fritz Heider - Psychology - 1982 - 340 pages
...status of commonsense ideas by according to them an essential place in all sciences. He has stated . . . science is rooted in what I have just called the whole apparatus of common sense thought. That is the datum from which it starts, and to which it must recur. . . . You... | |
| Victor Lowe - 19?? - 1056 pages
...concept of all the interrelated experiences connected with that chair — namely, of the experience of the folk who made it, of the folk who sold it,...from which it starts, and to which it must recur. We may speculate, if it amuses us, on other beings in other planets who have arranged analogous experiences... | |
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