| New Church gen. confer - 1875 - 618 páginas
...mind. If you can give me logical satisfaction otherwise, do so, but let us not attempt the absurd. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather...immediate objects of perception, which according to yon arfonly Uppearances of things, I take to be the real things themselves. It is for you to prove... | |
| George Berkeley - 1820 - 514 páginas
...ashamed to charge me with scepticism. This is so plain, there is no denying it. Phil. You mistake me. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather...of things, I take to be the real things themselves. HtjL Things! you may pretend what you please; but it is certain, you leave us nothing but the empty... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 556 páginas
...it is a shame it should be so at this time of day, and in a Christian country. Phil. You mistake me. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather...of things, I take to be the real things themselves. Hyl. Things! you may pretend what you please; but it is certain, you leave us nothing but the empty... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 542 páginas
...ashamed to charge me with scepticism. This is so plain, there is no denying it. Phil. You mistake me. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather...of things, I take to be the real things themselves. Hyl. Things ! you may pretend what you please ; but it is certain, you leave us nothing but the empty... | |
| Robert Blakey - 1848 - 584 páginas
..." I am not," says he, " for changing things into ideas, but rather ideas into things ; since these immediate objects of perception, which according to...things, I take to be the real things themselves." Again, "What yew call the empty forms and outside of things, seem to me the very things themselves... | |
| Ritter - 1853 - 680 páginas
...motu 21; 40; princ. of hum. knowl. 1 sq.; Hyl. I p. 149. 2) Hyl. III p. 179. 3) Ib. Ill p. 195 sq. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather ideas into things. — — In short you do not trust your senses , I do. 4) Ib. H p. 139 sq.; Ill p. 184 sq, wobnt ber... | |
| Heinrich Ritter - 1853 - 702 páginas
...motu 21; 40; princ. of hum. knowl. 1 sq.; IJjl. I p. 149. 2) Hyl. III p. 179. 3) Ib. 111 p. 195 sq. l am not for changing things into ideas , but rather ideas into things. — — In short you do not trust your senses, 1 do. 4) Ib. II p. 139 sq.; HI p. 184 sq. wobnt ber... | |
| Charles Richardson - 1854 - 292 páginas
...sensible things, which cannot exist f unperceived or out of the mind, then these things are ideas: 'f " I am not for changing things § into ideas, but rather...things, I take to be the real things themselves." || A few words will not be inappropriate here on the terms znternal and external, withz'n and without,... | |
| Samuel Bailey - 1855 - 846 páginas
...that Philonous is for changing all things into ideas, he makes the latter say : — " You mistake me. I am not for changing things into ideas, but rather...things, I take to be the real things themselves."* The same speaker afterwards says: — "We both, therefore, agree in this, that we perceive only sensible... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1857 - 846 páginas
...the philosophers and agree with the vulgar. " I am not for changing things into ideas," he says, " but rather ideas into things ; since those immediate objects of perception, which, according to you (Berkeley might have said according to all philosophers) are only appearances of things, I take to... | |
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