| Thomas Reid - 1967 - 556 páginas
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| Chris Scott - 1979 - 390 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Thomas Reid, William Hamilton, Harry M. Bracken, Thomas Reid, Sir William Hamilton - 1094 páginas
...find unanswerable arguments in that doctrine. [ 161 ] " Some truths there are," says Berke. ley, " so near and obvious to the mind, that a man need only open his eyes to see them. Such," he adds, " I take this important one to be, that all the choir of heaven, and furniture of the earth—... | |
| Thomas Reid - 1983 - 448 páginas
...would easily find unanswerable arguments in that doctrine. "Some truths there are," says Berkeley, "so near and obvious to the mind, that a man need only open his eyes to see them. Such," he adds, "I take this important one to be, that all the choir of heaven, and furniture of the earth... | |
| William H. Trapnell - 1988 - 244 páginas
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| George Berkeley - 1988 - 228 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Peter Walmsley - 1990 - 236 páginas
...seems to admit that esse is percipi might also be appreciated by an act of intuitive apprehension: Some truths there are so near and obvious to the mind, that a man need only 3 In pitting 'dry' against 'copious' exposition in entry 163 of the notebooks, Berkeley may be invoking... | |
| Wayne Waxman - 2003 - 368 páginas
...idea to exist separately from consciousness, he deemed this impossibility to be among those "truths... so near and obvious to the mind that a man need only open his eyes to see them " (PHK §6): That neither our thoughts, nor passions, nor ideas formed by the imagination, exist without... | |
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