Modern Theories in Philosophy and Religion |
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Page 9
... Positive , ' is also of special significance . There can be no better insight into the character of the author than the portrait which he has there drawn of himself , and of his difficulties in the preparation of his great work ...
... Positive , ' is also of special significance . There can be no better insight into the character of the author than the portrait which he has there drawn of himself , and of his difficulties in the preparation of his great work ...
Page 13
... positive ; and he attributes his passage from the first to the third and last of these stages to his connection with Saint - Simon . During this connec- tion , his early revolutionary tendencies were gradually moulded into the organic ...
... positive ; and he attributes his passage from the first to the third and last of these stages to his connection with Saint - Simon . During this connec- tion , his early revolutionary tendencies were gradually moulded into the organic ...
Page 15
... positive judgment in the case . It is unnecessary for us , happily , to adjudicate in such a business ; but in fairness to Madame Comte we must say , that if her views were worldly , and therefore " exasperating " to her husband , she ...
... positive judgment in the case . It is unnecessary for us , happily , to adjudicate in such a business ; but in fairness to Madame Comte we must say , that if her views were worldly , and therefore " exasperating " to her husband , she ...
Page 18
... Positive Phil- osophy ' are a sufficient testimony to the collected strength and sweep of the brain from which they issued . It is also true that there is much in M. Comte which the character of his malady enables us more clearly to ...
... Positive Phil- osophy ' are a sufficient testimony to the collected strength and sweep of the brain from which they issued . It is also true that there is much in M. Comte which the character of his malady enables us more clearly to ...
Page 19
... Positive Philosophy ' appeared ; and the period which elapsed till 1842 , when , after many delays and interruptions , the sixth volume completed the series , is acknowledged to have been " the great epoch " of his life . No one would ...
... Positive Philosophy ' appeared ; and the period which elapsed till 1842 , when , after many delays and interruptions , the sixth volume completed the series , is acknowledged to have been " the great epoch " of his life . No one would ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agnosticism argument Arnold Auguste Comte basis betwixt Blackwood's Magazine Caro character Christian Comte Comte's conception consciousness criticism Crown 8vo Democritus Divine doctrine dogma Dr Tyndall Edinburgh essay ethical existence experience external facts Fcap feeling Ferrier force German Gravenhurst Greek Philosophy Hartmann higher History human Hume idea ideal Illustrations intellectual intelligence Kant Kant's Kantian knowledge Königsberg Kritik language Lectures less LL.D logical materialistic matter meaning ment merely metaphysical mind modern moral nature never object perception Pessimism phenomena philosophy physical Positive Positivism Positivist Post 8vo principle privat-docent Professor question reality reason recognise religion religious righteousness says Schopenhauer scientific Scotland Scottish Second Edition sense Sir William Hamilton speculation sphere spiritual supposed Theism theology theory things thinker Thorndale thought tion Translated true truth University University of Edinburgh vols volume whole WILLIAM BLACKWOOD words writings
Popular passages
Page 303 - All things are delivered unto me of my Father, and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him.
Page 158 - But the passage from the physics of the brain to the corresponding facts of consciousness is unthinkable. Granted that a definite thought and a definite molecular action in the brain occur simultaneously; we do not possess the intellectual organ, nor apparently any rudiment of the organ, which would enable us to pass, by a process of reasoning, from the one to the other.
Page 295 - Governor of the universe," is to talk what appears to him unverifiable nonsense. But to talk of God as " the stream of tendency by which all things fulfil the law of their being...