A Manual of the History of Philosophy |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 81
Page 24
... Logic among the Greeks , in his Collection , Fasc . iv , No. 4 . J. GOTTLIEB BUHLE , De veterum Philosophorum Græcorum ante Aristotelem conaminibus in arte Logica invenienda et perfi- cienda . In the Commentatt . Soc . Goetting . tom ...
... Logic among the Greeks , in his Collection , Fasc . iv , No. 4 . J. GOTTLIEB BUHLE , De veterum Philosophorum Græcorum ante Aristotelem conaminibus in arte Logica invenienda et perfi- cienda . In the Commentatt . Soc . Goetting . tom ...
Page 40
... logical pretensions . Nothing has , even yet , been posi- tively decided on the question whether their civilization and sciences be indigenous or derived from others ; nor yet , whether they may not have blended certain notions either ...
... logical pretensions . Nothing has , even yet , been posi- tively decided on the question whether their civilization and sciences be indigenous or derived from others ; nor yet , whether they may not have blended certain notions either ...
Page 75
... logical arguments against motion " , and particularly by the well - known one named Achilles ' . 4thly . We cannot ... logic , of which he was the first teacher " ; and employing dia- logue " . 102. The speculations of the Eleate ( to ...
... logical arguments against motion " , and particularly by the well - known one named Achilles ' . 4thly . We cannot ... logic , of which he was the first teacher " ; and employing dia- logue " . 102. The speculations of the Eleate ( to ...
Page 88
... logical tricks of a kind to perplex their antagonists ; and , without possessing in the least degree a spirit of philosophy , they maintained all sorts of philosophical theories . The end of their system would have been to destroy all ...
... logical tricks of a kind to perplex their antagonists ; and , without possessing in the least degree a spirit of philosophy , they maintained all sorts of philosophical theories . The end of their system would have been to destroy all ...
Page 97
... logic . 117. The services which Socrates has rendered to phi- losophy are twofold ; negative and positive . Negative , inasmuch as he avoided all vain discussions ; combated mere speculative reasoning on substantial grounds ; and had ...
... logic . 117. The services which Socrates has rendered to phi- losophy are twofold ; negative and positive . Negative , inasmuch as he avoided all vain discussions ; combated mere speculative reasoning on substantial grounds ; and had ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Absolute Amsterd Anaxagoras ARIST Aristotle Aufl Averroes Berl born cause character CHPH Christian consequence deduced Deity derived Descartes died DIOG disciple Diss Dissert distinguished Divine doctrines Dogmatism ebend endeavoured Epicurus especially Essay existence external fasc Fichte flourished Francf Gött Götting Greeks Halle Hamb Hist History of Philosophy ibid ideas inquiries Jena Kant knowledge Königsb labours LAERT latter Leibnitz Leips Leipz libb Lips Logic Lond losophy Lugd Malebranche Math MEINERS Metaphysics mystical Nature Neoplatonists Nominalists objects Opera opinions original Paris Parmenides Philos philoso Phys Plato Platonis Plotinus PLUTARCH principles Pythagoras quæ Quæst Reason Religion respecting Scepticism Schelling Schriften second edition SEXT SEXTUS sive Socrates soul speculative spirit Stoics Theology theory things tion translated treatises Truth Ueber Unity Versuch virtue Vitâ Viteb vols XENOPH Xenophanes
Popular passages
Page 438 - ... equally to be found in comparing the productions of profane authors, and thus to arrive at a greater degree of certainty. If the reverse of this appears to have been the case in modern times — if the state of things with regard to this epistle, like that which belongs to German philosophy, appears " to discourage the very idea of the possibility of a satisfactory solution" — it is much to be suspected that there has been something wrong in the method of investigation.
Page 312 - A Letter to the learned Mr. Henry Dodwell, containing some Remarks on a pretended Demonstration of the Immateriality and Natural Immortality of the Soul, in Mr. Clarke's Answer to his late Epistolary Discourse, &c.
Page 312 - A Letter to Mr Dodwell; wherein all the Arguments in his Epistolary Discourse against the Immortality of the Soul are particularly answered, and the Judgment of the Fathers concerning that Matter truly represented.
Page 293 - Tractatus theologico-politicus , continens dissertationes aliquot, quibus ostenditur libertatem philosophandi non tantum salva pietate et reipublicae pace posse concedi, sed eandem nisi cum pace reipublicae ipsaque pietate tolli non posse.
Page 62 - A Chronological Account of the Life of Pythagoras, and of other Famous Men his Contemporaries. With an Epistle to the Rd Dr. Bentley, about Porphyry's and Jamblichus's Lives of Pythagoras. By the Right Reverend Father in God, William, Ld BP of Coventry and Lichfald.
Page 314 - As a philosophy, Buddhism thus seems to be an Idealistic Nihilism; an Idealism which, like that of Berkeley, holds that "the fruitful source of all error was the unfounded belief in the reality and existence of the external world"; and that man can perceive nothing but his feelings, and is the cause to himself of these.
Page 309 - Things Divine and Supernatural Conceived by Analogy with Things Natural and Human (1733) he asserts that knowledge of God's essence and attributes can bo only " analogical
Page 58 - Graecia, until the conquests of the Persians and the troubles of southern Italy compelled it to take refuge in Athens ; from which, as a centre, intellectual civilization was disseminated, and, as it were, radiated over the whole of Greece. 83. The starting-point of philosophy was the question concerning the origin and the elementary principle of the world : the resolution of which was attempted after the experimental method by the Ionic school ; and the formal method by the Pythagoreans.
Page 44 - Originals: *Zend-Avesta, Ouvrage de Zoroastre, Contenant les Idees Theologiques, Physiques et Morales de ce Legislateur, les Ceremonies du Culte...
Page 393 - X being supposed to exist in ego, may be signified by this formulary, ego sum ego. This is the self-evident principle of moral philosophy and knowledge in general, expressing the necessary form and substance of consciousness. In virtue of this principle we form judgments; to judge being an act and operation of ego. Ego then establishes, absolutely and independently, its own existence, being at once the agent and the result of the action, in which combination consists the essence of consciousness....