| John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 578 Seiten
...similar sensations to them, except so far as their organs of sensation may vary from the type of ours. This puts the final seal to our conception of the...groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in Nature. The permanent possibilities are common to us and to our fellow-creatures ; the actual sensations... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 342 Seiten
...similar sensations to them, except so far as their organs of sensation may vary from the type of ours. This puts the final seal to our conception of the...groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in Nature. The permanent possibilities are common to us and to our fellow-creatures ; the actual sensations... | |
| Alexander Bain - 1868 - 902 Seiten
...experience of the human mind, if they were not conceived to be something intrinsically and gencrically distinct from the present feelings. The sensations...groups of possibilities as the fundamental Reality in Nature. The idea of Externality is derived solely from the notion that experience gives of the Permanent... | |
| Alexander Bain - 1868 - 904 Seiten
...experience of the human mind, if they were not conceived to be something intrinsically and genetically distinct from the present feelings. The sensations...of the groups of possibilities as the fundamental Beality in Nature. The idea of Externality is derived solely from the notion that experience gives... | |
| Alexander Bain - 1868 - 588 Seiten
...feelings. The s*.-n^atiuns ct-ase ; the possibilities remain ; they are independent of oar will, oar presence, and everything belonging to us. Moreover, we find other sentient beings recognizing, in com•BOO with ourselves, the Permanent Possibilities. They may not L»ve ue same actual sensations,... | |
| James Mill - 1869 - 492 Seiten
...similar sensations to them, except so far as their organs of sensation may vary from the type of ours. This puts the final seal to our conception of the...groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in Nature. The permanent possibilities are common to us and to our fellowcreatures ; the actual sensations... | |
| Hippolyte Taine - 1871 - 606 Seiten
...possibility of sensations to them, except so far as their organs of sensation may vary from the type of ours. This puts the final seal to our conception of the...groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in Nature. The permanent possibilities are common to us and to our fellow-creatures; the actual sensations... | |
| Noah Porter - 1882 - 530 Seiten
...these possibilities of sensation " belong as much to other human or sentient beings as to ourselves." " This puts the final seal to our conception of the...groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in nature." In this climax of his argument Mr. Mill altogether forgets the fundamental postulates of his... | |
| Dublin city, univ - 1885 - 476 Seiten
...? 7. The step here spoken of (the inference of the intermediate link) being supposed to come after our conception of the groups of Possibilities as the fundamental reality in nature, what is the circle in which Mill is involved ? If we place the conception just mentioned later,... | |
| James Martineau - 1888 - 438 Seiten
...conceptions are thus surreptitiously introduced for which it is intended to furnish an idealistic origin. (5) 'The, final -seal to our conception of the groups of possibilities as the fundamental reality in Nature' is put by our discovery, that other people reckon on them as we do, in spite of the difference... | |
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